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

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

On the need for introspection The rise of intolerance, warped narratives and fascism



2016-11-29

During my resident time at the Na Uyana Aaranya, Malsiripura in my early twenties, the first two books introduced to me by Ven. Ananda Thera were -- the ‘ Milinda Panna’ in Sinhala and the Kalama Sutta, of which the small library possessed an English translation. It was not by chance that I ended up in the monastery. My childhood friend was, now Ven. Watagoda Maggavihari. I had met him once at the same place prior to him being ordained and a year or two after, I packed my bags on the trek to experience solitude. Although time and tide were never within a man’s reach to curtail, I have made it a point to meet Ven. Maggavihari, the most scholarly among my friends at Royal College and one of the most talented of sportsmen on the field, at least annually to discuss life, politics, the unknown and the unfathomable. The discussions are yet to be as memorable as the lesson taught to the Kalamas.  



How Ampitiye Sumana received a sound beating from policeman!

How Ampitiye Sumana received a sound beating from policeman!

Nov 29, 2016

Information is coming to light about yet another ‘heroic’ by chief incumbent of Mangalarama Vihara in Batticaloa, Ampitiye Sumana. The then DIG in charge of Batticaloa in 2011 was a devoted Buddhist, and he used to pay visits to all temples in the district, offer alms and inquire into the welfare of the resident monks.

One day when he went to Mangalaramaya, Sumana asked him a favour, “DIG Mahattaya, give me a Sinhala Buddhist son.” Puzzled by the request, he asked, “What, Apey Hamuduruwane. Why are you asking me to give a son?”
 
“Give me a son from the police. I live amidst hundreds of Tamil villages. Send me a son from the police to guard me and my temple,” he appealed. Understanding that the temple and the Thera face a certain security risk even through the war was over, the DIG sent a PC on the next day for the temple’s protection.
 
Sumana generously gave denims, T-shirts, underwear, perfumes to the son of the police. He did the police duty very gladly.
 
Around midnight on a moonless day, Sumana had a Ganja smoke, went to where the policeman was sleeping and was about to do something naughty, when he woke up. Sumana, who tried to perform a sexual act, was pushed aside by the policeman, who then gave him a sound beating. Sumana fled the temple and went into hiding.
 
On the following Monday, the policeman went to the DIG’s office carrying along with him the service weapon and his travelling bag. The DIG apologized to the PC for having sent him to the temple without knowing the true man behind Sumana, and asked him to keep it a secret, in order to prevent any disrespect to Buddhism due to such acts by persons like Sumana. The policeman in question presently serves at a police station in the eastern province. 
 
That is why it is said that patriotism is the last bunker of the villain.

An Anxious Nation Waits Silently


Colombo Telegraph
By Vishwamithra1984 –November 30, 2016
Self-respect is the root of discipline: The sense of dignity grows with the ability to say no to oneself.” ~Abraham Joshua Heschel
It is indeed a great experience to commute between work and home in Colombo. The traffic jams, the painstaking waiting in traffic lights which are turned off during the worst hours so that a live constable could direct traffic without allowing the undisciplined motorists to beat the red light and thereby cause new jams which are beyond the realm of road-discipline and to unscramble the traffic gridlock is a herculean task, whether the duty officer is an experienced one or not. To move again is a dream come true. Day in and day out, those who use our roads are confronted with this awfully distasteful task of navigating in a stormy ocean of traffic, motor and pedestrian, trying one’s way. A moving nightmare, this spectacle plays out without a break, mirroring a nation whose compass is lost for some time; sometimes, never to find it again in this lifetime.

traffic
Photo via Colombo Roads Traffic Facebook
This pitiful panorama of life at large is being displayed out for all to see and experience, reflecting a people’s impatience, their callous disregard for law and order, failure on the part of those who charged with maintaining a semblance of order and discipline on road, the Traffic Police. Politicians of the last regime who used to whistle past helpless ‘others’ to their unknown destinations, official or otherwise, may be absent today, yet the absolute indiscipline of the subject people is no less than it was during any time. This unadulterated road-rowdiness is in display wherever one chooses to travel- an incredible agony for the onlooker and an excruciating wait-and-run for the motorist. All those who use our roads suffer a collective suffocation of life, commute and everything else that really matters in day to day existence. But the inconceivable human stories that surround all those who use our roads, the traffic and other outfits of travelling, are never told in full mournful detail. So I decided to make an attempt- with my own humble pen.
The mass of commuters waiting at bus stops, hundreds of school children in their own personal hordes chatting and joking about the various goings-on in their respective classes, a Buddhist monk hurrying back to his temple before dark; some in three-wheelers, some in four-wheelers and yet others treading the good earth, for they are nor fortunate, or yet unfortunate, to use mo-bikes, and other commuting paraphernalia that populate our narrow streets of the urban and suburban Colombo.
Their needs, their wants, their weeping and laughter, their comings and goings, their daily struggle to put food on the table for their families, all these and more make an integral part of the glorious mosaic of life. Its splendor, its lamentation, its begrudging complaints and its magnificent celebrations, its snail-paced drag and its nauseating speed and its waits and insufferable disappointments and its hidden jealousies and hatreds, its wicked motives and cruel executions, all these play an enormous role in a man’s day, whether he travels by bus, three-wheeler, mo-bike or on foot, the core does not change. Deep inside that core resides humanity’s essentials, its values and those values’ validity and vitality. This great human drama is being played around every corner of this globe. Not only in Colombo, not only in other urban cities, not only in the great suburbs. It’s being enacted in the remotest hamlets and villages.

Another Rs.20 million from Ranil to Mahinda


rani-mahi
 
Rs.20 million has been allocated from a supplementary estimate to extend the buildings of the official residence of retired President Mahinda Rajapaksa which was renovated and handed over to him recently. The supplementary estimate was presented to parliament by the Leader of the House Lakshman Kiriella.
The allocation to construct an extension to former president Mahinda Rajapaksa’s official residence has been presented to parliament on 24.05.2016.
Earlier too Maithri – Ranil government allocated Rs.30 million to renovate the residence according to the liking of Mr. Rajapaksa.

Dane’s ‘Don’ well confirmed – Caught red handed..!


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -29.Nov.2016, 5.20PM)   Recently , an insane racist Dane was remanded , and now it has come to  light who is the ‘Don’ of this Dane , who is behind all the ruthless unrest , racism , extremism, violence , trauma and turmoil that are being unleashed in the country ; he is no less a person than the discarded and deposed ex president of the country Medamulana Mahinda Rajapakse ! 
The leader of a mafia organization is called a ‘Don’ in their parlance though this word has other connotations .The leader of the extremist organization to which Dane belongs is this ‘Don’ who brought the country to the brink of irretrievable disaster when he was ruling the country , and therefore was thrown out  lock , stock and barrel by the people. The photograph herein clearly confirms  who this Don is who still seeking to wallow in destructive extremism and racism with  selfish ruthless motives to the detriment of the country with a view to regain power based on his inordinate greed for ruthless despotic power.
It is the general consensus ,there can be  nothing more difficult in this world than to search and capture such  a rare barbaric brute of a Don who during the two terms as president resorted to all the villainies and most destructive activities most viciously and vigorously  against  civilized society and the people of his own country  by design and not by accident. Yet , strangely this brute  is still  persisting in those destructive activities even after being ousted from power when these are leaders who should be behind  bars  or within lunatic asylum or in a museum exhibited as a rare specie of a human being that breathes evil , thinks evil , acts evil , stokes evil and spreads evil in this world.
 
When it is a universally  acknowledged  fact that Sri Lanka is a country that was most  battered and bruised by a 30 years old cruel ethnic war, an ex president of the country himself once again leading the campaign to arouse communal hatred and racism once again is most reprehensible and abominable. Nothing can be more cruel or savage specially when it is a power greedy  ex president of the country himself who is  indulging in these traitorous and devastating activities against the country while also parading as its  savior.
It is therefore being questioned widely and rightly by the patriotic citizens of the country whether this traitorous ‘Don of Dane’ who is also suffering from senile decay is sane or both Don and Dane are insane ?


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by     (2016-11-29 12:14:04)
Nine SL sailors held on ship in Houthi rebel stronghold

2016-11-29

The Government is keeping in touch with the Sri Lankan Embassy in Oman and the Consulate in Dubai, UAE to get the nine Sri Lankan sailors held by Houthi rebels of Yemen released, Foreign Affairs Ministry said today.

 Ministry sources said the ship with the nine Sri Lankan sailors aboard had been held by the rebels in an area controlled by them because of a dispute that had taken place between the cargo supplier and the cargo receiver.

 “We have instructed our mission in Oman, which is monitoring the situation in Yemen at the moment, to get back to us after the negotiations are concluded. We have also informed our consulate in Dubai to initiate discussions with relevant parties since the headquarters of the shipping company is based in Dubai. However, no response has been received by us so far,” sources said.

 They said a court case was pending between the cargo handler and the receiver. The release of the sailors was getting delayed because of external issues such as communication among factions and lengthy court proceedings, they said.

 However, sources said there was no threat to the lives of the sailors and they have in fact contacted the authorities over the phone to inform them that they are alive and well. 

The ship with 26 people on-board, including the nine Sri Lankans, was taken over by the rebels two months ago.
 According to foreign media reports, Houthi rebels of Yemen and their political allies have formed a new government in the country yesterday. (Lahiru Pothmulla)

Australian lawmakers urge end to Israeli abuses of Palestinian children


Some of the 49 members of Australia’s parliament who signed a letter urging Israel to end its military detention of Palestinian children participate in a press conference organized by the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network in Canberra, 28 November. (via Facebook)

Ali Abunimah-28 November 2016

One in five members of Australia’s parliament is calling on Israel to end its systematic abuses of Palestinian children.

“Israel is the only country in the world that automatically prosecutes children in military courts. And only Palestinian children,” dozens of members of the Australian house of representatives and senate say in a letter released by the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network on Monday.

“Up to 700 Palestinian children are arrested each year by the Israeli military, and this number is increasing,” the 49 lawmakers add, citing United Nations reports that ill-treatment of Palestinian children is “widespread, systematic and institutionalized.”

The lawmakers call on Israel to comply with its obligations under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and “to not arrest or detain Palestinian children unless this is a last resort, and if they are detained, to immediately institute protections for those children including that their safety and best interests are prioritized, and that they are permitted a fair trial.”

Growing debate

The letter is part of a growing debate on Israel’s human rights abuses. Earlier this month, Maria Vamvakinou, a member of the main opposition Australian Labor Party, introduced a motion calling on Australia “to raise concerns with the Israeli government about the treatment of Palestinian children.”
Though parliament has yet to vote on the measure, a number of lawmakers have given speeches calling on Israel to end its abuses of Palestinian children:


“We are very encouraged to see this issue resonating with members of parliament in Australia,” Beth Miller from the human rights group Defense for Children International-Palestine told The Electronic Intifada. “The situation on the ground for Palestinian children is increasingly dire. This is a welcome sign that more leaders are ready to take bold action to ensure justice and accountability.”

International success

The initiative in Australia was the result of international cooperation among advocates for Palestinian rights.

Over the summer, members of APAN – the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network – contacted the No Way to Treat a Child campaign about its successes in winning US congressional support for Palestinian children’s rights.

Led by the American Friends Service Committee and Defense for Children International-Palestine, the No Way to Treat a Child campaign has gained traction in notoriously difficult political territory for those working to hold Israel accountable for its abuses.

“We were thrilled that organizers in Australia heard of our advocacy with members of the US Congress about Palestinian children in Israeli military detention,” Jennifer Bing of the American Friends Service Committee told The Electronic Intifada. “We had several email and Skype exchanges to share strategies and effective messaging with those often silent about Palestinian human rights.”
In June, 20 US lawmakers urged President Barack Obama to send a “clear signal” to Palestinian children that their lives are valued.

In a letter initiated by Minnesota congresswoman Betty McCollum, the lawmakers urged the president to appoint a special envoy to protect the rights of Palestinian children under Israeli occupation.
A year earlier, 19 US lawmakers called on Secretary of State John Kerry to “prioritize the human rights of Palestinian children” in relations with Israel.

While Obama did not act on the lawmakers’ request, and unconditionally awarded Israel the biggest US military aid package in history earlier this year, the lawmakers’ willingness to speak out is a sign of the greater opennessand contestation over Palestinian rights within the Democratic Party.

One of the signers of the letter to Obama was Minnesota congressman Keith Ellison, a leading contender to be chair of the party’s top governing body, the Democratic National Committee.
‘Tragedy of huge proportions’: Brazilian soccer club’s moment of glory ends in deadly plane crash

November 29 at 5:13 PM
 It was the culmination of an astonishing climb to the top of South America’s soccer world: a modest club from Brazil heading to the finals of a continent-wide tournament. Then came a distress call from the cockpit of the plane carrying the team to Colombia.

Moments later, radar contact was lost late Monday with the charter jet carrying 77 people, including players and coaches from Brazil’s Chapecoense soccer club. The wreckage was found wedged in the folds of a muddy and rain-soaked hillside about 50 miles from Medellín — with just six survivors answering the calls of rescuers.

One by one on Tuesday, authorities in white coveralls collected the bodies — scattered over the low brush or inside the splintered cabin — and carried them down the mountain on stretchers.
Among the 71 dead: a player who recently learned he was to be a father, a goalie beloved for his acrobatic saves, and coaches who helped bring Chapecoense to the biggest moment in its 33-year history. Survivors included at least three Chapecoense players, two airline crew members and a journalist, Colombia’s civil aviation agency said.

The plane was initially reported to be carrying 81 people, but authorities said later that four did not actually board. Disaster management officials at the crash scene said Tuesday afternoon that all of the bodies there have been removed and that one “black box” recorder has been found.

Carlos Eduardo Valdés, chief of Colombia’s Forensic Science Institute, said the remains were being taken to Medellin for identification. He said the identification process — through fingerprints and dental records, with DNA testing as a last resort — could take another four or five days.

The tragedy threw soccer-mad Brazil into collective grief and an official three-day mourning period. All matches in South America were canceled for a week in a show of solidarity. Across the globe, the sport paid homage: a moment of silence by Spain’s FC Barcelona and Real Madrid clubs before practice, and condolences from current and former superstars including Argentina’s Diego Maradona.
“A tragedy of huge proportions,” said Medellín’s mayor, Federico Gutierrez.

Outside Chapecoense’s home stadium in Chapeco, about 800 miles south of Rio de Janeiro, tearful backers gathered in a spontaneous vigil. And, in a mournful twist of the online age, team websites and players’ Twitter feeds were filled with images of joyful Chapecoense players in their last hours as they began the trip to Colombia — including a poignant last video by defender Felipe Machado.

The team’s official website changed its logo from green to black.

“This is a very sad day for soccer,” wrote Gianni Infantino, president of world’s soccer’s governing body FIFA.
Meanwhile, aviation experts tried to piece together the cause of the disaster.

Authorities initially suspected a fuel shortage — with the British Aerospace 146 aircraft near the limit of its range — but investigators increasingly began to study a possible electrical failure on board, said an official for the Colombian aviation agency. The official spoke on condition of anonymity under normal rules to brief reporters.

Colombia’s El Tiempo newspaper reported that the pilot requested priority landing because the plane was low on fuel and that it may have subsequently suffered an electrical fault.

A team of British aviation specialists headed to Colombia to join the probe, which will include analysis of flight data recorders recovered from the crash site.

The plane, operated by the charter company LaMia Airlines, left from Santa Cruz de la Sierra, a city in southern Bolivia, where the team had arrived on a commercial flight. The company was originally based in the Venezuelan city of Merida, but said it shifted operations to Colombia, the Associated Press reported.

The same plane had carried Argentina’s national team earlier this month, Argentine state-run media reported. British Aerospace, now known as BAE Systems, said the 146 model aircraft began service in 1981 and that about 220 are currently in use.

“At this sad time that the tragedy falls on dozens of Brazilian families, I express my solidarity,” Brazilian President Michel Temer said in a statement. “We are putting all the means to help families and all the possible assistance.” Temer declared three days of official mourning and promised government help for the families of victims.

Chapecoense had been scheduled to play in the finals of the Copa Sudamericana against Atlético Nacional of Medellín. The first match of a home-away series — which would decide the second-most coveted soccer crown in South America — was set for Wednesday.

In an interview with TV Globo news at Chapecoense’s home stadium, Ivan Tozzo, the team’s vice president, wiped away tears.

“It is very sad the news we received this morning. We never expected it,” he said, speaking from the team’s dressing room. “A team getting international attention, and a tragedy like this happens, it is very difficult and a very big sadness, but we will put faith in God.”

The president of the team’s board, Plínio de Nes Filho, said he spoke to team members just before they left Brazil. “They said they were going in search of a dream to turn this dream into a reality for us,” he said, according to the news site O Globo. “The dream ended.”

The aviation authority confirmed on its Facebook page Tuesday morning the names of the passengers who initially survived the crash. Several members of the soccer team — including Alan Luciano Ruschel, Hélio Hermito Zampier Neto and Jakson Ragnar Follmann — were among those rescued from the crash site.

Goaltender Marcos Danilo Padilha also was found alive, but he later died while receiving medical treatment, the team said.

Two crew members — Ximena Suárez and Erwin Tumiri — were also rescued, along with Brazilian journalist Rafael Henzel.

The club posted a brief statement on its Facebook page: “May God accompany our athletes, officials, journalists and other guests traveling with our delegation.” It said it would have no further comment until it had more details on the crash.

The club was seen as a Cinderella story just two years after breaking into Brazilian soccer’s first division. It defeated Argentine powerhouse San Lorenzo last week to make it into the two-game championship round. On Sunday, it lost to Sao Paulo team Palmeiras in a game that decided the Brazilian championship.

The team’s ascent from the depths of Brazilian soccer was the talk of the South American sporting world.
“It is common for Brazilians to say that the country has 12 clubs with actual chances to win the national title at the start of every season,” wrote Plus55 of the Chapeco team this week. “A small club, however, is slowly breaking this logic and has a real shot at becoming 2016’s most successful Brazilian club at the international level.”

The team’s climb was not sudden, however. It started winning lesser championships in 2010, moving up the ranks of Brazilian soccer from the C division to the A division. It started playing with elite Brazilian teams in 2014, the article noted, “and has not been relegated since, another rare feat as novice teams are likely to head back” to the B division “in the blink of an eye.”

Some players stayed behind because of injuries. A forgotten passport kept the son of the team’s coach, Caio Júnior, off the flight that claimed the life of his father.

“We are strong. We will get through this,” the son, Matheus Saroli, posted on his Facebook account, according to soccer site Lance.

World soccer has been hit by aviation tragedies before.

In 1958, the core of the Manchester United soccer team was among those killed in the crash of a British European Airways plane attempting to take off from Munich-Riem Airport. The team, nicknamed the “Busby Babes,” was returning from a European Cup match in Belgrade and, at the time, was widely hailed as one of the powerhouses in international soccer.

Schmidt and Murphy reported from Washington. Julia Symmes Cobb in Medellin contributed to this report.

France, Britain push Syria gas attack sanctions; Russia opposed

A still image taken on September 7, 2016 from a video posted on social media said to be shot in Aleppo's Al Sukari on September 6, 2016, shows a boy breathing with an oxygen mask inside a hospital, after a suspected chlorine gas attack, Syria. Social Media via Reuters/File Photo TVA still image taken on September 7, 2016 from a video posted on social media said to be shot in Aleppo's Al Sukari on September 6, 2016, shows a boy breathing with an oxygen mask inside a hospital, after a suspected chlorine gas attack, Syria. Social Media via Reuters/File...

By Michelle Nichols | UNITED NATIONS- Wed Nov 30, 2016

France and Britain are pressing to sanction those responsible for chemical weapons attacks in Syria, though Russia says it would not support a United Nations Security Council resolution.

An inquiry by the United Nations and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) found that Syrian government forces were responsible for three chlorine gas attacks and that Islamic State militants had used mustard gas.

French U.N. Ambassador Francois Delattre said on Tuesday that a draft resolution "sanctioning those responsible for the use of chemical weapons" was essentially ready and would be circulated to the 15-member council as soon as possible.

British U.N. Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said the draft resolution would "make sure that those members of the regime who were involved in that abhorrent use of chemical weapons in Syria will face the consequences."

The inquiry found the Syrian government's 253 and 255 squadrons, belonging to the 63rd helicopter brigade, were responsible for gas attacks and said that those "with effective control in the military units ... must be held accountable."

Russian U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said, however, there was "just not enough material proof to do anything" and described the French and British bid to impose sanctions as a "misplaced effort."

"We wouldn't support any action on this," Churkin told reporters. He said the important thing was the council had earlier this month been able to extend the mandate of the inquiry for another year. He said Russia hoped that would serve as a deterrent.

Chlorine's use as a weapon is prohibited under the Chemical Weapons Convention, which Syria joined in 2013. If inhaled, chlorine gas turns to hydrochloric acid and can kill by burning lungs and drowning victims in the resulting body fluids.

Syria agreed to destroy its chemical weapons in 2013 under a deal brokered by Moscow and Washington. The Security Council endorsed that deal with a resolution that said in the event of non-compliance, "including unauthorized transfer of chemical weapons, or any use of chemical weapons by anyone" in Syria, it would impose measures under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter.

Chapter 7 deals with sanctions and authorization of military force by the Security Council. The French/British draft could propose targeted sanctions - a travel ban and asset freeze - on people or entities linked to the attacks.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; editing by Grant McCool)

Epical Castro Has Nothing to do with Today’s Resistance!

castro_file_ni
Today, the most important question is to take Castro out of this superficial worshiping propaganda machinery and dig into the people’s history to understand what really went wrong in this nation.

cropped-guardian_english_logo-1.pngby Nilantha Ilangamuwa-Nov 28, 2016

(November 28, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Mere propaganda of personalities is neither going to achieve the true success of the nation nor improve the living condition of the people who sacrificed much more than what our popular leaders on the headlines did. People in Cuba and the world is mourning and celebrating the death of Dr Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz who ruled the island nation located just 90 miles away from its top enemy United States of America. For some, he is a true legendary hero, but others he is a brutal dictator who assassinated the very meaning of a nation.

What is the lesson need to be learned here? Give a damn to Batista who is the corrupted puppet whose woebegone govern policies has created the path to control Cuba by one person, Castro, for decades. No election, but celebrations on revolution. No essentials to general life, but mere statistics on the success of the socialist way. The list is much bigger than the bearded face portraits placed on most of the walls in Cuba. Castro has taken the last breath. It is somewhat an end of an era of this tiny Caribbean Island.

I’m not in a hurry to brand Castro as a bad man which I would never agree, but, the system he has developed was, unfortunately, unable to solve the very problems of the society. When Pol Pot failed in achieving prosperous change even by killing one-fourth of his countrymen and women, defeated Pol Pot finally declared the experiment had failed, therefore he had failed. But Cuba is different from Cambodia. In fact, Cuba is different from most of the others who attempted liberation through “socialism”.  Cuba remains in world politics and played a significant role in the international affairs from sending well-trained doctors to heal the sick around the globe to preventing the most deadly political crisis in our history – the missiles crisis. But, it is unfair to engage in blindfolded praise of Castro while ignoring the public in the country.

Let our old distorted and deteriorated so-called leftists who were enjoying all in the capitalist societies while wearing leftist clothes on the stage commemorate and write epics on Fidel and his death. Those hypocrites are always grabbing the opportunities and deteriorate the space of true resistance. Let them sell the old songs as usual. But, the real challenge before us is to deconstruct Fidel’s ideology and understand the commitments by the common people in Cuba. Such will facilitate an opportunity to re-design the resistance to be compatible with and capable of addressing the core notions of the social contrasts.

Castro read himself much earlier than anyone else. He was groomed as a dynamic and charismatic youth activist since the day he delivered a speech against US Marine Corps who urinated the statue on the José Martí, a Cuban national hero and an important figure in Latin American literature. It is something that makes one be proud of him as a fellow human being. Unlike most of other politicians, he has written constantly not the jargon but some meaningful lines of understanding. He would have no worries before his death as he went far than his imagination. He is bigger than his life. But, what about the rest who were falling in love with his bearded face with a Havana cigar which is little more than a commodity and useful tool in highly motivated propaganda?
Life in Havana
Life in Havana
Let’s take Castro into our mind as per his respect for self-dignity. Let’s leave our older generation to blindfolded worship and honour before the memories they have on Castro continuing in their habitual commemorations of Ho Chi Min, Che and Mao even Stalin and Pol Pot. But, how relevant is his ideology in the present context is our question. Neither his strategies nor his economic policies are going to solve what the present youth are demanding. In this situation, Castro will remain like the wallpaper as the subject of the past. It is hardly believable that Castro’s ideology can represent in the resistance against suppression where pleasure is used as the tool to oppress society.

Nonetheless, no doubt Castro has become an icon in the pages of history. But he is now mere symbolic figure among the youth population in which almost all are spending most of their time with smartphones and other fancy utilities in the world today. Since the announcement of his death by his brother, the President of Cuba, Rahul Castro, like other sharing through social media the Facebook which is owned by billions of unique users who are selling their personal life for nothing, has come under the Castroism rain. Most of them were based on what they have heard from someone else and it’s highly unlikely that one would find anyone who would have a relative and comprehensive viewpoint of the people in Cuba today. Why should people in this nation don’t matter while a handful of leaders who controlled the island dominated all attention of wider world?

Today, the most important question is to take Castro out of this superficial worshiping propaganda machinery and dig into the people’s history to understand what really went wrong in this nation. Castro has accomplished his mission much earlier under severer difficulties just because of the thoughts and needs of majority were sacrificed for Castro.  This blind love kept the Castro’s administration going indefinitely and it handed over the power to the leader to decide the ultimate. At the same time, undemocratic despicable attempts and brutal embargo to overthrow Castro by the United States strengthened Castro while giving him legitimacy to suppress the dissidents and the general public. As a result, many more prisons were constructed, and the local spy agencies systematically suppressed the civil liberties of society in that part of the world. The abuse so much that Castro himself admitted that the system (model) he had developed was no longer working even in Cuba. This is the nucleus of the system that would deconstruct Castroism.

But, we made the same mistakes over and over again in attempting to deconstruct those who were larger than life personalities. Right after the death of most leftist icons their credits were turned into a blind credence by their followers than making use of their contribution to re-design the political formula to understand what needed to be done to save the positive and prevent the negative. Modern day resistance against systemic crimes in ruling structures will not succeed without the total destruction and elimination of the old pattern of credence.

A new era has begun much earlier than anyone thought. Our yesteryear heroes have left after taking and rendering some meaning to life. But, we seem to be already late to constellate and consolidate to determine who can resist future oppression except for nothing more than pleasure. Castro fought guerrilla warfare, but present oppressor has to calculate systematic ways of eliminating privacy, climate change, nuclear arsenal and much more.

To successfully face the real challenges in the post-Castro era one needs to look into Huxley’s significant understanding of social control than the Orwellian theory of a boot stamping on a human face.

Nearly 900 cases of hate, intimidation after Trump win: report


White supremacists have verbally and physically attacked minorities, invoking Trump's name, says new SPLC report

The Southern Poverty Law Center suspects there are many more unreported cases of intimidation and abuse (AFP)
Tuesday 29 November 2016
Nearly 900 incidents of hate and intolerance were recorded across the United States in the days following Donald Trump's election, many by assailants apparently emboldened by his victory, an advocacy group reported Tuesday.
"I have no doubt whatsoever that this is a tremendous, tremendous undercount," said Richard Cohen, president of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate crimes.
"The level of hate that's been unleashed by the election... is something entirely new."
The group recorded 867 cases of harassment and intimidation in the 10 days following Trump's election, which was cheered by white supremacists and others fired up by his rhetoric disparaging immigrants, Muslims and women.
"Many harassers invoked Trump's name during assaults, making it clear that the outbreak of hate stemmed in large part from his electoral success," it said in a report.
Though it was not clear from the SPLC data whether the United States is experiencing a spike in such attacks, Cohen said that: "Time after time, those who reported hate incidents to us said they had never experienced anything like that before."
"The level of hate that's been unleashed by the election, they told us, is something entirely new."
Most incidents involved graffiti or verbal harassment, although a small number were violent physical altercations.
Slightly more than half of the cases were anti-immigrant or anti-black. The incidents were reported in nearly every state in the country, led by California with 99 cases.
At a middle school in Colorado Springs, Colorado, Latino students were told that "Not only should Trump build a wall, but it should be (electrified) and Mexicans should have to wear shock collars."
In Silver Spring, Maryland, a church offering Spanish-language services was spray-painted with the messages "Trump Nation" and "Whites Only."

Swastikas

In Los Angeles, a large sign saying "NO N----RS" was placed next to a bus shelter, while a woman in Arizona reported that two men in a truck yelled "Trump forever", adding racist and sexist slurs, as she put groceries in her vehicle.
There were recorded 80 instances of swastikas scrawled onto public spaces, schools, cars and garage doors. Many also included references to Trump.
In Vermont, the front doors of a synagogue were defaced with swastikas.
Although the SPLC report only detailed cases from the 10 days after the election, Trump-related disturbances have continued to crop up as the president-elect stokes controversy with his senior advisor picks.
Trump has faced calls to distance himself from white nationalists, and the pressure became acute after members of the white supremacist movement were caught on film celebrating his victory with Nazi salutes.
He finally did so in an interview with the New York Times last week, saying: "I don't want to energize the group, and I disavow the group."
But Trump's pick of chief strategist Steve Bannon remains closely identified with white nationalism, while his attorney general nominee Senator Jeff Sessions has been accused of racism and his national security advisor, retired lieutenant Michael Flynn, has promoted anti-Muslim conspiracy theories.
The SPLC is spearheading an online petition calling on Trump to rescind his appointment of Bannon.

'Stop it'

In his first major interview following his election, Trump instructed perpetrators of harassment and intimidation to "Stop it."
But those words fall flat when considering Trump's senior administration appointments, Cohen said.
"His words must be followed by concrete actions, both his policies and his appointments, to repair the wounds of division that his campaign has caused," he said, calling on Trump to apologize and reach out to marginalised communities.
"If he doesn't do those things, the hate that Mr Trump has unleashed during this election season will continue to flourish."
Trump has proposed policies have put civil rights advocates on alert. His Muslim ban proposal, suggestions of creating a Muslim registry, attempts to crack down on journalists and pledge to deport all undocumented immigrants have raised concerns.
On Tuesday, he tweeted that people who burn the American flag should lose their US citizenship or spend a year in jail, although US law bars the government from revoking citizenships, and burning the flag is not unlawful.

South Korea: President Park offers to resign after smooth transition

People watch TV screens showing the live broadcast of South Korean President Park Geun-hye's addressing to the nation. AP
People watch TV screens showing the live broadcast of South Korean President Park Geun-hye's addressing to the nation. AP

29th November 2016

SOUTH KOREAN President Park Geun-hye on Tuesday asked parliament to decide how and when she can give up power over an influence-peddling scandal, taking the country’s political crisis deeper into uncharted terrain.

The main opposition Democratic Party rejected Park’s offer, calling it a ploy to escape being impeached, and said it would continue efforts to bring an impeachment motion in parliament, which they have sought to do as soon as Friday.

No South Korean president has failed to complete a single five-year term since the current democratic system was implemented in 1987.

“I will leave to parliament everything about my future including shortening of my term,” Park said in a brief televised speech.


Her dramatic manoeuvre puts the burden of resolving the political crisis on parliament, which has been controlled by a coalition of opposition parties since Park’s conservative Saenuri Party unexpectedly lost its majority in April elections.

If Park resigns or an impeachment vote in parliament is upheld by the Constitutional Court, an election must be held in 60 days to nominate a president to serve a five-year term, with the prime minister leading the country in the interim.

That short time frame could leave the main political parties looking to buy time in order to coalesce behind presidential candidates, and political analysts said it may take months for parliament to agree on an exit plan for Park.

“I will step down from my position according to the law once a way is formed to pass on the administration in a stable manner that will also minimise political unrest and vacuum after ruling and opposition parties’ discussion,” Park said, her voice firm.

Park Kwang-on, a Democratic Party lawmaker, said it looked like she was trying to stall proceedings.
“She is handing the ball to parliament when she could simply step down,” he told Reuters.

“She is asking parliament to pick a date for her to resign, which she knows would lead to a discussion on when to hold the presidential election and delay everything.”

Park, 64, had apologised twice previously but until Tuesday resisted mounting public calls to quit. Her term is scheduled to end in February 2018.

“She doesn’t want the parliament to impeach her and she doesn’t think that the parliament can soon reach an agreement, so she is making things complicated and trying to shift some of her blame to the parliament,” said Shin Yul, a professor of political science at Myongji University.

ROCK-BOTTOM APPROVAL RATING

Some lawmakers from Park’s Saenuri party had asked her to resign under an agreement that would allow her to leave office with some dignity.

On Saturday, hundreds of thousands of South Koreans rallied for the fifth weekend in a row, calling for Park’s resignation. Organisers said the crowd totalled 1.5 million, while the police estimated the crowd at 260,000.

Park’s approval rating fell to just 4 percent in a weekly survey released on Friday by Gallup Korea, an all time-low for a democratically elected South Korean president.


Park’s friend, Choi Soon-sil, and a former aide have been indicted in the case. Prosecutors named Park as an accomplice in an investigation into whether big business was inappropriately pressured to contribute money to foundations set up to back Park’s initiatives.

The presidential office and Park’s lawyer have denied the accusations. She has immunity from prosecution in the case as long as she remains in office.

Park has acknowledged carelessness in her ties with Choi, who Park has said had helped her through difficult times.

“Not even for a moment did I pursue my own gains and I have lived without one iota of self-interest,” Park said on Tuesday.

The friendship dates to an era when Park served as acting first lady after her mother was killed by an assassin’s bullet intended for her father, then-president Park Chung-hee. Five years later, in 1979, Park’s father was murdered by his disgruntled spy chief. – Reuters