Peace for the World

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

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Yester-Years: The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna and The Cuban Revolution

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Immediately after the insurrection of April 5, 1971 the Government had made an appeal to the rest of the world to give it arms, and these were provided by capitalist, socialist and non-aligned governments, as politically diverse as Singapore, India, the United States, the Soviet Union, China and Pakistan.

cropped-guardian_english_logo-1.pngby Lionel Bopage-Dec 1, 2016

( December 1, 2016, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) In the 1950s, Cuban revolutionaries launched their July 26 Movement (Movement) to get rid of foreign domination and economic injustice. In 1952, Fulgencio Batista launched a coup d’etat, which made the Cuban people lose their democratic rights. They had become indignant and resented the dictatorial regime. For the United States, the Batista dictatorship provided full protection for their business interest in Cuba. So naturally the US regime provided strong political and military backing to the Batista regime.

Fidel Castro took power on New Year’s Day 1959, and promised to share his nation’s wealth with its poorest citizens, who had suffered under the corrupt quarter-century dictatorship of Batista. At the start, the Movement gained vast political support from the Cuban people, as it represented a national democratic movement that underpinned the genuine aspirations of the Cuban people including the restoration of the constitution of 1940.

The new Cuban government took initiatives to implement agrarian reforms, which was essential and necessary for economic development, the US demanded compensation for the land that would be nationalised. The US resisted Cuba’s willingness to pay the land values declared in the last tax returns, asked for more, and threatened to cut the sugar quotas the US purchased The Soviet Union promised to buy whatever sugar that the US did not buy and pay by supplying crude oil at a preferential price. Yet, the Americans owned Cuba’s refineries, and refused to process Soviet crude oil.

In retaliation, Cuba nationalized U.S.-owned oil refineries. In 1962, Cuba declared itself a socialist state. Despite the setbacks at the early stages of the revolution, education, health care and employment made clear improvements. Cuba was committed to internationalism with their strong support for Latin American, Vietnamese and several African revolutionary movements.

However, with the forging of links between Cuba and the Soviet Union, the influence of the Popular Socialist Party (Partido Socialista Popular – PSP) grew strong. PSP was a Communist Party in Cuba, before the 1959 revolution. Even closer to the final stages of Batista’s defeat, the PSP declared that the struggle the ‘Movement’ had launched was adventurist. They even went to the extent of betraying several leaders of the student movement that supported the Movement. Despite the conflicts between the Movement and the PSP leadership led by Anibal Escalante, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union reinstated the status quo of the PSP and placed PSP leaders in charge.

Cuban Revolution ( File Photo)
Cuban Revolution ( File Photo)
I recollect, when the leaders of the Movement, particularly led by Che, attempted diversification of the Cuban economy, the leaders of the PSP and the USSR favoured the sugar based one crop dependent economy. Even under Cuba’s leader of independence, Jose Marti, reliance on sugar was considered as “committing suicide”. One of the main reasons for Cuba’s dismal economic state was its increasing dependency on sugar for its export earnings – not helped one iota by the crippling immoral US economic embargo.

Fidel’s plans failed, and food rationing began in 1961. From my point of view, Fidel Castro could not be distinguished from the pro-Soviet policy positions adopted by the previous PSP leaders. Cuba’s foreign policy was Soviet foreign policy. And so was the foreign policies of the Communist parties all over the world, including that of Sri Lanka. Due to the worsening economic situation in Cuba, tens of thousands workers and peasants, including a significant number of Afro-Cubans fled the country for an uncertain future in the U.S. This was different from the situation in the early 1960s’ where those who fled were from the upper echelons of the society.

 In the pre-1970 period, in Sri Lanka, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (the JVP) was known as “The Movement”. The JVP unambiguously has its ideological roots to Marxism/Leninism, Maoism and the Cuban revolution. We in the Movement, noted that like Cuba, we were a plantation economy, we were under American imperialism, had a comprador bourgeoisie, a complacent left and a large, neglected and exploited peasantry. What united Communists and other activists of the left was the spectre of the American empire in the form of its aggressive foreign policy and its rapacious search for raw materials and markets. Young progressive leftists all over the world took note of the Cuban revolution.

Immediately after the insurrection of April 5, 1971 the Government had made an appeal to the rest of the world to give it arms, and these were provided by capitalist, socialist and non-aligned governments, as politically diverse as Singapore, India, the United States, the Soviet Union, China and Pakistan. Once the insurrection was crushed the government had around 15,000 of the JVP’s cadres in detention. Some had been seized while fighting the armed forces; some had been picked up under the emergency regulations, while others had given themselves up; believing the government’s promise of amnesty. All were imprisoned in overcrowded dank conditions. Some were shot dead, allegedly while attempting to escape.

Despite the human rights abuses committed by the then regime, Cuba expressed solidarity with the coalition regime, though it did not provide material support, except allowing Mr Anura Bandaranayke to stay in Cuba with Fidel Castro until the dust settled down in Sri Lanka. From my point of view, this attitude of Cuba would have been due to the influence of the Soviet Communist Party and the Ceylon Communist Party (Moscow wing). In 1978, Cuba sent troops against the Eritrean Liberation Front, and argued it was for protecting Ethiopian territorial integrity from Eritrean separatists. Cuba praised the tyranny of Mengistu Mariam in Ethiopia as a genuine progressive force. Cuba was willing to change its tune at the whim of the Soviets.

After 1977, in line with the aim of developing more fraternal relationships with progressive forces abroad, the JVP developed ties and offered solidarity with the Vietnamese, Cuban, Palestinian, FRETLIN and other progressive liberation movements. Most left-wing parties and progressive people across the globe supported these struggles politically. In the late 1970s we still had issues with the Cuban Communist Party. According to my memory, it would have been 1979, when the JVP was invited to send a delegation to the World Federation of Democratic Youth (WFDY) Festival held in Havana.

Comrade Rohana Wijeweera was to lead the JVP delegation. As he was visiting Havana, we wished him to have a meeting with Fidel, as the leader of the Cuban Communist Party. This was conveyed to the Cuban Communist Party through the Cuban Embassy in Colombo. However, the Cubans refused the repeated requests of the JVP. Rohana decided to boycott the Festival altogether. This was conveyed to the embassy, and ultimately, the meeting was sanctioned by the Cubans, if my memory is correct. Subsequently, we came to know that the Communist Party of Sri Lanka had exerted undue influence for preventing this meeting from taking place.

Despite the many human rights abuses committed by the parties during the conflicts in Sri Lanka, during the April 1971 insurrection, during the 1988-89 insurrection and the war between 1983-2009 of the Tamil militants, Cuba has consistently supported the Sri Lanka government. Cuba strongly opposed holding an international investigation into any crimes committed during the war. There have been other international situations, where Cubans have sided with repressive regimes.

The argument put by countries like Cuba and their supporters is that the revolutionary spread of socialism is uneven around the globe. Thus, over a period of time compromises are required in dealing with the imperialist world. As one apologist convolutedly put it in the seventies, it was a fact that:
socialist states will therefore have to survive for considerable periods in co–existence with an imperialist world itself riven by shifting internal contradictions; and that therefore socialist governments will be faced with a relatively autonomous arena of socialist struggle at the diplomatic level.[1]

This was the sort of political detente which the JVP rejected when Rohana and his other comrades formed the JVP. They wanted to form an indigenous radical socialist party independent of the dictates of the Soviet Union, China or Cuba. Even though the party respected the gains and influence of these socialist blocs in the world theatre, they had seen the reactionary influence of their paid acolytes on the politics of the island.

[1] Brewster, B. (1971). Communication on Ceylon and China. In New Left Review, December issue.

Workers’ rights cannot be won through protests – Prez


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By Saman Indrajith-December 1, 2016, 9:59 pm

President Maithripala Sirisena in Parliament yesterday called on all trade unions to find solutions for their grievances through negotiations without causing inconvenience to general public.

Participating in the third reading stage budget debate under the expenditure heads of the Ministry of National Integration and Reconciliation coming under his purview, the President said that there was no problem that could not be sorted out through negotiations.

"Workers’ rights cannot be won through demonstrations, strikes or boycotts which would only place the people in difficulty. Innocent people would suffer due to trade union action," the President said.

He invited trade unionists to meet the relevant subject ministers and forward their grievances to them without resorting to union action. If the unionists could not find solutions through discussions with their ministers, then they could avail the services of the cabinet sub committees appointed to provide solutions for such problems. "If the unionists could not obtain the solution even after meeting the cabinet sub committees, I am ready to discuss with them," the President said.

He said the incumbent government was a one that protected labour rights. "We will not deprive the workers of their right to engage in trade union activities."

"I request the unionists not to place innocent people in difficulty by staging demonstration to shut down roads for hours. You cannot win union struggles through such means, but only through negotiations."

Hands up against AIDS!

2016-12-01

An awareness walk was launched today under the National STD/AIDS Control Programme by the Health Ministry from the Colombo National Hospital to the Campbell Park in Colombo to mark the World Aids Day – 2016. Pix by Damith Wickremesinghe 



The Shared Practices Of Democracies


Colombo Telegraph
By S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole –December 1, 2016
Prof. S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole
Prof. S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole
Hon. Karu Jayasuriya our Chief Guest, Distinguished Guests: A warm welcome to you all on behalf of the Election Commission. We are here to celebrate 85 years of our Donoughmore Heritage. It is indeed a great achievement. It is natural to celebrate such sturdy accomplishments; to be proud of them.
I have just returned after attending two international meetings. Our participation endorses and affirms our continued commitment to our democratic traditions. First, the important meeting of the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, or IFES, to observe the US Elections. And second, the Commonwealth Electoral Network’s Steering Committee or CEN meeting where Sri Lanka represents the Asian Region. I am happy to report that we were selected to host the next of our series of CEN Biennial Meetings. It will be held around May 2018; here in Colombo. It was made apparent to us at the meeting that this choice recognizes the respect we have justly earned as a democracy. Sri Lanka will chair CEN from that meeting until the next meeting in 2020. The Commonwealth wanted a credible voice for CEN; a respected spokesperson’s voice. Mr. Mahinda Deshapriya’s name figured prominently in this choice. It did so because the Commonwealth Observation Team saw first-hand the drama that unfolded before them on that eventful night of 8 January 2015.
Thomas Cranmer: A Genius with the English Language
Thomas Cranmer: A Genius with the English Language
Enough, now, on our achievements! However good we might be, we can always be better. Recognizing this, CEN and IFES together seek to share our pool of best practices. Every democracy from around the globe – big or small, strong or weak – has contributed to these best practices, practices that we all innovate and share. This sharing helps us expand on and reinforce our Donoughmore Heritage. I therefore wish to share here some of the practices that others employ which we can benefit from; practices I learnt of, practices I learnt from, on this trip. I have chosen to elaborate on four of these that struck me as very relevant and important to us here in Sri Lanka.
First, voter registration. We have been doing this for years in ways similar to those of many other countries. We therefore think we have perfected this. Annually our Grama Niladris – our Kirama Sevahars – go house to house in the month of June and register voters. Two deficiencies in our methods were, rather forcefully, brought to my attention: those who turn 18 a little after June 1 will not be able to exercise their franchise until they are really 19. Mind you, the constitution gives each citizen the right to vote upon reaching the age of 18.
Our Commission has been aware that we fail our youthful voters badly in this. It has been deliberating on what we can do. The Commonwealth, on the other hand, advocates registration, particularly as an election is just ahead of us; not periodically at fixed times. They also suggest that our use of public servants as temporary employees seconded to the Commission for this exercise, makes our voter rolls questionable. They say the loyalty of public servants may lean towards the party in power. That opens to question the credibility of our voter rolls. They suggest using people from the private sector as well. We must certainly think about this.
Second: The US Elections saw 30% of the electorate voting well before polling day; which technically is only the last polling day. To preserve the secrecy of the ballot, two envelopes are used. An outer envelope verifies the validity of the voter’s registration. Inside that envelope is a secrecy envelop containing the actual, marked ballot. It has no marking. It is pooled with all others and opened at the time of counting. Is this not the means to three useful things? – a) avoiding long lines at the polls that discourage voter participation, b) increasing through enhanced convenience, the participation of emergency workers and people who must travel long distances on polling day and therefore cannot vote; and c) restoring the right to vote of our Diaspora. After all, the Diaspora are guaranteed the right to vote as citizens in our constitution. But we deny them that right. They bring in valuable foreign exchange. We cannot – we must not – fail them.
IMMEDIATE DETERRENT ACTION NEEDED TO ERADICATE INTER-COMMUNITY VIOLENCE

pic by: Dinouk Colombage

Saturday, 26 November 2016
After a two year lull that followed replacement of the former government through the electoral process, public manifestations of inter community tension have increased in recent months. There are indications of political maneuvering behind these efforts to disturb the peace in the country and to bring ethno-religious nationalism to the fore. Video footages of religious clergy engaging in vitriolic attacks on those of other ethnic and religious groups have gone viral on the social media. Ethno nationalist organizations have been engaging in hate campaigns and intimidating those of other communities at the local level. Most notably in the North and East, there are clashes being reported on inter religious grounds. There are many incidents of religious clergy getting involved in expansionist projects, such as religious conversions, destruction of ancient sites or building places of worship in areas where they are less numerous
The National Peace Council welcomes President Maithripala Sirisena’s admonition that anyone who violates the law would be dealt with by the law enforcement agencies. In a context in which religious tension is rising, the government is planning to conduct programmes to educate the clergy of all religions on the importance of integration and reconciliation. The Ministry of National Integration and Reconciliation A H M Fowzie is making arrangements to hold programmes to promote national reconciliation. Minister of Justice and Buddhasasana, Wijeyadasa Rajapaksheha has said that all ethnic and religious groups are welcome to participate in the dialogue. He said various groups, including the Bodu Bala Sena and Ravana Balaya, had agreed to participate in the effort to resolve issues through dialogue.
In addition to its awareness creation and dialogue-centred activities, the National Peace Council calls on the government to take action against those who engage in hate speech which creates disaffection and mistrust between communities. The suspected arson attack last Saturday on a Muslim owned warehouse in a Colombo suburb that was previously burned down in 2013 by a mob makes it clear that law enforcement is an urgent priority. In the past there has been a climate of impunity with charges not being brought against the perpetrators, and the victims being railroaded into informal settlements or face worse consequences. This has only served to embolden the aggressors. As their conduct is in clear violation of the law we demand that the laws against incitement to disaffection be enforced by the Attorney General and the Police and those engaging in violence are given exemplary punishment through the judicial process as a deterrent to racist and mob action before they grows out of hand.
Governing Council
National Peace Council
The National Peace Council is an independent and non partisan organization that works towards a negotiated political solution to the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka. It has a vision of a peaceful and prosperous Sri Lanka in which the freedom, human rights and democratic rights of all the communities are respected. The policy of the National Peace Council is determined by its Governing Council of 20 members who are drawn from diverse walks of life and belong to all the main ethnic and religious communities in the country.
Court of Appeal issues notice to Karunasena Hettiarachchi

Court of Appeal issues notice to Karunasena Hettiarachchi

logoDecember 1, 2016

The Court of Appeal Thursday issued notice on Secretary to the Ministry of Defence Karunasena Hettiarachchi and several others, Ada Derana reporter said.

 The notice was issued after considering a petition filed by the Centre for Environmental Justice, when it was taken up for hearing before a bench led by Justice Vijith Malalgoda. 

The petition has argued a construction has been launched in a lowland in Pothuarawa area in Malabe by the Ministry of Defence, without permission from the Urban Development Authority and the Department of Agrarian Development. 

The respondents in the petition include several persons including Defence Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi, heads of the Urban Development Authority and the Department of Agrarian Development.  

  The Court of Appeal also ordered the respondents to file their objections regarding the petition before 11 January, 2017.

Kumar Gunaratnam out today

2016-12-02

Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) politburo member Kumar Gunaratnam, who was sentenced to one year's imprisonment for violating visa regulations, is to be released from the Anuradhapura Prison today (Nov. 2) after completing his sentence, the Prisons sources said yesterday.

 He was sentenced to imprisonment by the Kegalle Magistrate on March 31, 2016. He was also fined Rs.50,000.

 Confirming that Mr. Gunaratnam would be released today, the FSP yesterday said it would submit a fresh application to the Immigration and Emigration Department today itself seeking Sri Lankan citizenship for Gunaratnam.

 FSP propaganda secretary Pubudu Jayagoda said they had applied for Sri Lankan citizenship for Mr. Gunaratnam on two previous occasions -- first on February 18, 2015 and next on November 2, 2015.

 “The previous applications had been referred to the Ministry by the Department, and they have been stuck in the Ministry ever since. However, we shall apply again today,” he told Daily Mirror. 

When asked if Mr. Gunaratnam would give up his Australian citizenship, Mr. Jayagoda said the Immigration Department here would have to grant him Sri Lankan citizenship first. According to international conventions, he said, a person should have citizenship of at least one country.

 “If Australia revokes his citizenship, Kumar should have the citizenship of another country -- Sri Lanka,” he said.

 He said they had met the Controller of Immigration and Emigration last evening and applied for a Sri Lankan visa for Kumar so that he could remain in the country after he was released, till his citizenship process was completed. Jayagoda said the Controller had issued the visa. 

He said they would not immediately halt the Satyagraha outside the Fort Railway Station -- which they had launched calling for the release of Gunaratnam from prison. 

“Today the objective of the Satyagraha is not only Kumar's release but also his gaining citizenship. We won’t call it off on account of Minister Nawinne’s remarks,” he said.

 Internal Affairs Minister S. B. Nawinne had told in Parliament yesterday that Gunaratnam would be given Sri Lanka citizenship if he applied for it and gave up his Australian citizenship. (Lahiru Pothmulla) - 

Central Bank finalises US$200 million currency swap with China

Central Bank finalises US$200 million currency swap with China
Dec 01, 2016
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka is nearing finalization of a US$200 million currency swap with Chinese Development Bank to boost foreign exchange reserves and help avert a balance of payments crisis.
The country is in need of strengthening foreign exchange reserves which is stood at  $6.1 billion even after allowing the rupees to float in market fluctuations.
The country is struggling to tackle heavy debt piled up under the previous government and its debt servicing gradually becoming unbearable, economists said.
The terms of the currency swap agreement have already been negotiated and the contract has been forwarded to the Attorney General’s Department for legal clearance, Central Bank Governor Indrajit Coomaraswamy has announced in Colombo.
The agreement will be signed early next year he added.
The Asia Development Bank has estimated that Asia will need $8.3 trillion beyond existing financing capabilities between 2010 and 2020.
In this context, Chinese loans may be an important lifeline for countries that have not managed to secure access to financing from the ADB or World Bank.
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Management has directed the Treasury to explore ways and means of mobilising Exim Bank and China Development Bank investment for new projects, as well as strengthening cash flow and liability management of ongoing projects.
Long term borrowing from China at interest rates ranging from 2-3% and 6-7% under strict conditions laid down by Chinese lending institutions was the only option available to the then  Sri Lankan government to implement post-war development projects in North, East and the South.
On the other hand the country has received several soft loans from China at an interest rate of 2-3% with maturity terms of 20 years, with 5 years expandable on condition, and 2-5 years grace period official data showed.
The country has also obtained concessionary loans at an interest rate of London Interbank offered Rate (LIBOR) plus basis points, which is negotiable to condition, 12-15 years as terms, and 2-5 years grace period, and the financing has been covered by an insurance premium issued by Chinese Sinosure, a state-owned insurance company for import-export business.

IGP’s assurance to minister not to arrest Nilame or Neelam

Prez to call for explanation 


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Pujith

By Saman Indrajith-December 1, 2016, 9:58 pm

President Maithripala Sirisena informed Parliament yesterday that he would call for explanation from IGP Pujith Jayasundara over the latter’s recent remarks on taking persons into custody by the Financial Crimes Investigation Division during a police commemorative event at Ratnapura.

Soon after President Sirisena completed his speech during the third reading debate on Budget 2017 under the expenditure heads of National Dialogue, National Integration and Reconciliation and Disaster Management Ministries, Joint Opposition MP Wimalaweera Dissanayake demanded to know from the government how the IGP assured that there would be no arrests of a particular person by the FCID even before the investigations.

"We saw on TV the previous night how the IGP was bending the law again. This time he tells a minister over the phone that the FCID would not arrest a particular Nilame (other opposition MPs shout Neelam, Neelam, not Nilame). I would like to know whether the IGP was referring to the Basnayake Nilame of the Devinuwara Devale Mahesh Gunasekera."

The President responding on behalf of the government said: "I too watched that visual on TV. What he did was completely wrong. I intend to summon him and ask for an explanation."

The Opposition MPs thanked the President profusely for the quick response and thumped their desks in approval.

Bail conditions of Gota and 6 others relaxed

avant-garde

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One of the bail conditions for the 7 accused including former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa in the case filed by the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery of Corruption for inflicting a loss of Rs.11.4 billion by maintaining a floating armoury in Galle Harbour has been relaxed. The condition that has been released is the travel ban imposed on the 7 accused.

However, anyone going abroad will have to inform the Registrar of the Colombo Chief Magistrates Court and the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery of Corruption ordered Colombo Chief Magistrate Gihan Pilapitiya.

The trial was fixed for 13th February. Former Additional Secretary of the Defense Ministry Damayanthy Jayaratne, who is an accused in the case, has not been arrested. She has gone abroad violating rules and regulations for state employees and has avoided the hearing.
SC orders Mervyn to pay Rs.400,000


2016-12-01

The Supreme Court ordered former Deputy Minister of Highways and Road Development Mervyn Silva to pay Rs.400,000 personally as compensation to the Petitioner for the demolition and destruction of a parapet wall, two toilets and a wash room in Kiribathgoda that belonged to the Petitioner. 

Justice Anil Gooneratne, with Justices Eva Wanasundera and K. T. Chitrasiri concurring, observed in his judgment that the law did not permit any kind of manipulation by the 7th Respondent Mervyn Silva to cause harm to citizens or interfere with their basic rights. 

Justice Gooneratne also observed that a court of law cannot be immune to or ignorant of happenings around the country that affect human lives and cause tremendous loss or injury to persons, including the loss of property.

 He further observed that if an illegal act or wrong was done to a citizen and he sought legal remedy, the court needed to engage itself in an all-inclusive inquiry to obtain circumstantial and direct evidence and try the case according to the law. 

The fundamental rights jurisdiction vested in the Apex Court was wide enough to reach a genuine complaint of a citizen who had suffered as a result of executive or administrative action, he noted.

 That was the reason the court, even in the past, permitted litigants to submit their grievances even by post or post cards, and permitted applications to be entertained beyond the period ordinarily permitted by basic law, he added. 

The Supreme Court also ordered the then Chief Inspector of Police of Kiribathgoda and the State to pay Rs.50,000 and Rs.100,000 respectively to the Petitioner as compensation. 

Court also directed the Inspector General of Police to conduct investigations and ascertain whether any other persons were responsible for the destruction of the petitioner’s property, and whether instruments and machinery belonging to the State had been utilised by them to cause the destruction, and to take appropriate action after consulting the Attorney General. 

Petitioner Asitha Nanayakkara Liyanage cited Chairman Prasanna Ranaweera and Secretary Hemapala Hettiarachchi of the Kelaniya Pradeshiya Sabha, the Commissioner of Local Government (Gampaha), the then Chief Inspector of Police, Kiribathgoda, Mervyn Silva, the Attorney General and two others as Respondents. 

Vishva Gunaratne, with Sandeepani Wijesooriya, appeared for the Petitioner. D. M. G.Dissanayake, with Ms L. M. C. D. Bandara, appeared for Mervyn Silva. 

Petitioner complained against the Respondents for harassment and abuse of him and his family, which ultimately resulted in the demolition and destruction of part of the house in which he resided and which belonged to him. (S.S.Selvanayagam)

US-led coalition admits 54 civilian deaths in Syria, Iraq strikes

The coalition tally of civilians killed in the anti-IS campaign since 2014 is 172, but rights groups say the real figure is far higher

US soldiers inside an army base in Qayyara, near Mosul, 24 November (Reuters)

AFP-Thursday 1 December 2016 
The US-led coalition bombing the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq said Thursday that 54 civilians had been "inadvertently killed" in seven air strikes between March and October.
The announcement brings the official coalition tally of civilians killed to 173 since the anti-IS campaign began in the fall of 2014 - though critics and rights groups say the real figure is far higher.
"Although the coalition makes extraordinary efforts to strike military targets in a manner that minimizes the risk of civilian casualties, in some cases casualties are unavoidable," the coalition said in a statement.
Airwars, a London-based collective of journalists and researchers, uses local sources, photographs and media accounts to keep a detailed list of every known coalition air strike.
They have praised Pentagon efforts at accountability compared with other actors in Syria, such as Russia and government forces, but the group says the number of likely civilian deaths from coalition strikes is 1,915 at a bare minimum.
As of November 17 - the date of the most recent tally - the coalition had conducted a total of 16,291 strikes, about two-thirds of them in Iraq, and the rest in Syria.
Coalition officials said they had also recently reviewed 12 other reports of civilian casualties, but these were deemed "non-credible."
The deadliest strike occurred on 18 July, when an aircraft attacked a group of IS fighters near Manbij in Syria, killing about 100 of them.
But "up to 24 civilians who had been interspersed with combatants were inadvertently killed in a known IS staging area where no civilians had been seen in the 24 hours prior to the attack," said the coalition.
In a 28 July strike, also in Syria, 15 civilians were killed when a moving IS vehicle that had been targeted slowed in a populated area.
Officials said the vehicle had slowed after the guided bomb was released.
On 22 October, a strike in Iraq on an IS position being used to attack Iraqi forces killed eight civilians.
Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said Thursday's announcement marked the start of a "more regular process" of releasing civilian casualty information.
"We, as you know, go to extraordinary lengths to protect against civilian casualties in the first place," he told reporters.
"No other nation (or) coalition in the history of warfare does what we do to exercise extraordinary care in carrying out air strikes to prevent them."

Israeli soldiers not in danger when they killed woman, boy

No action is taken against soldiers who violate the Israeli army’s open fire regulations, a human rights group says.Issam RimawiAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy-30 November 2016

Israeli forces “acted without any justification and did not face lethal danger” when they shot three Palestinians, killing two of them, in separate incidents last month, the human rights group B’Tselem has said.

Two of those shot, one fatally, were children.

Khalid Bahr Ahmad Bahr, 15, was slain on 20 October when he was shot in the back from a distance of approximately 20 meters while running away from soldiers at the entrance to a grove near Route 60 in Beit Ommar, a village in the southern occupied West Bank.

A military inquiry into the incident determined that “the soldiers’ lives were not in danger, and that they could have acted differently in this case,” according to the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz.

An Israeli army spokesperson said that the incident is being investigated by the Military Police Investigation Unit, and will then be referred to the Military Advocate General.

30 bullets fired

A day before Khalid Bahr was killed, Israeli forces shot dead Rahiq Shaji Birawi, 19, at the Zaatara intersection near the northern West Bank city of Nablus.

A military inquiry found that Birawi pulled out a knife while approaching the forces and a Border Police combatant shot at her legs, but missed.

“At this stage, and as a video clip published in the media shows, four Border Police officers fired around 30 bullets at Birawi while she was several meters away from them, killing her,” according to B’Tselem.
The Border Police said the incident was still under investigation, Haaretz reported.

“The massive shooting at [Birawi], when she was already lying on the ground and could no longer endanger the Border Police officers, is unjustified and unlawful,” B’Tselem stated.

“This incident joins a list of dozens of cases of extrajudicial executions since October 2015,” the group added. “This policy receives support from both military and government officials, who instruct security forces that terrorists should die.”

The third case investigated by B’Tselem concerns the 15 October shooting of Faris Ziyad Ata Bayid, 15, with a rubber-coated metal bullet during a protest by dozens of youths outside the entrance to Jalazone refugee camp near the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Israeli soldiers used stun grenades, rubber-coated metal bullets and live ammunition to try to disperse the demonstration.

Bayid was among around six youths who had climbed to the base of a nearby hill, “where they hid at a distance of 20-30 meters from the soldiers above them, who fired at them,” according to B’Tselem.

“While Bayid was preparing to throw a Molotov cocktail at the soldiers, and before it had been ignited, the soldiers fired three or four ‘rubber bullets’ and live ammunition toward him,” B’Tselem stated. “One of the ‘rubber bullets’ struck Bayid in the head.”

Shot in head

A 17-year-old boy who was hiding with Bayid told B’Tselem that soldiers “shot a rubber bullet directly down at us. [Bayid] was struck in the upper front of his head.”

“The bullet tore open a hole with a diameter of two or three centimeters,” the witness added. “He began to bleed heavily and fell on his back, totally unconscious and immobile. His eyes flipped over.”

Bayid underwent surgery for his injuries, “but he has not yet regained consciousness and he is still connected to a resuscitation device in the intensive care unit,” B’Tselem stated.

“He’s in a vegetative state and his chances of survival are poor,” Haaretz reported this month.
A military inquiry found that the soldiers were justified in opening fire.

B’Tselem stated, however, that the shooting was “unlawful,” and that the boy “was shot when he was about to throw a Molotov cocktail at the soldiers. The device had not been ignited, and from Bayid’s position at the bottom of the hill he did not pose lethal danger.”

The rights group said that the different “security establishment” responses to the three incidents are identical in terms of the outcome, and will not lead to accountability or change in soldiers’ conduct or prevent such incidents from occurring again in the future.

The group questioned the purpose of open fire regulations issued to soldiers when no action is taken against those who breach them.

Earlier this year, B’Tselem announced that it would no longer cooperate with or refer cases to the Israeli army’s internal investigation unit. The group’s director stated that “We will no longer aid a system that whitewashes investigations and serves as a fig leaf for the occupation.”

Israeli forces have killed 100 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip so far this year, 75 of them during attacks and alleged attacks.

Israel has withheld the bodies of more than 130 Palestinians killed during attacks and alleged attacks over the past year, and still holds on to more than 20, including the remains of Birawi and Bahr.

Waad al-Kateab is an award-winning film-maker. And she is in grave danger

For a year, Waad al-Kateab has exposed the horrors of Aleppo. Now she is trapped there. We can only hope Syrian forces treat her and her fellow citizens properly, writes Channel 4 News Editor Ben De Pear.
A year ago Channel 4 News commissioned a young woman in Aleppo, Waad al-Kateab, to make a film about life inside the city. Her film about a teenager who was modelling the rebuilding of a dream Aleppo with cardboard, glue and bits of rubbish showed a rare scene of hope from within that shattered city.

As the horror of Aleppo deepened earlier this year, we took the decision to take Waad on as an exclusive film-maker for us and the results have been searing testaments to life under siege in the rebel held east of the country’s largest city. All year Waad has provided dozens of outstanding reports that have led and dominated our programme and have now been viewed hundreds of millions of times by people around the world. Her films can all be viewed at insidealeppo.com.


Much of what Waad provided was from the emergency room of the hospital where her doctor husband works, but it has not just been the screams of the injured and dying she has captured. She has done that most important thing in journalism: she humanised the victims, showed us whole families in their worst moments, chronicled their pain and showed the world the horror, without intruding, and with a skill it takes most decades to learn.

Now with the tide turning against the rebels there are many questions as to what is happening to those the government are capturing, whether civilians or fighters. Waad has been unable to leave the city for months, has a young child and is pregnant with another. Along with a quarter of a million other people, she is now at the mercy of the forces that surround her, but as a journalist and in the company of medical staff who have stayed simply to tend to the many injured and dying in Aleppo, we expect her, like everyone, to be extended the rights every citizen has. We expect that the government of Syria will protect the lives of civilians, especially non-combatants, medical staff, women and children, as it has repeatedly declared it will.
Watch all of Wa’ad’s films on insidealeppo.com
This week Waad won two Amnesty International awards, and in her absence sent these words to be read and shared.

“Maybe this will be my last letter to you and to the world. I am in the most dangerous city in the world and only today 30 barrel bombs and 100 artillery shells fell on my neighbourhood (al-Sukkari). I wanted to be with you but the siege of the city prevented that. I am just one individual among the 270,000 people who live under this siege. The only thing that’s available in this city is air, but this air, most of the time, is polluted with poisonous gases and chlorine. We are not the only city in Syria under siege and our salvation will not be achieved only by the lifting of this siege or halting the bombing, but with the fall of the Assad regime and getting our freedom and dignity as Syrians. I would have liked for my lens and my colleagues’ lenses to give you the complete picture of Aleppo, but we are helpless in front of the horrors of annihilation that the Russians and the regime are enjoying in this ancient city.

“This is a perished city called Aleppo. And all its people are asking you to remember your humanity.”


We need a president who can stand up to big corporations, not fold to their demands.

Donald Trump is going to have to toughen up if he wants to serve American workers. (Steven Senne/AP)

 Bernie Sanders is a U.S. senator from Vermont
Today, about 1,000 Carrier workers and their families should be rejoicing. But the rest of our nation’s workers should be very nervous.

President-elect Donald Trump will reportedly announce a deal with United Technologies, the corporation that owns Carrier, that keeps less than 1,000 of the 2,100 jobs in America that were previously scheduled to be transferred to Mexico. Let’s be clear: It is not good enough to save some of these jobs. Trump made a promise that he would save all of these jobs, and we cannot rest until an ironclad contract is signed to ensure that all of these workers are able to continue working in Indiana without having their pay or benefits slashed.

In exchange for allowing United Technologies to continue to offshore more than 1,000 jobs, Trump will reportedly give the company tax and regulatory favors that the corporation has sought. Just a short few months ago, Trump was pledging to force United Technologies to “pay a damn tax.” He was insisting on very steep tariffs for companies like Carrier that left the United States and wanted to sell their foreign-made products back in the United States. Instead of a damn tax, the company will be rewarded with a damn tax cut. Wow! How’s that for standing up to corporate greed? How’s that for punishing corporations that shut down in the United States and move abroad?

In essence, United Technologies took Trump hostage and won. And that should send a shock wave of fear through all workers across the country.


Trump has endangered the jobs of workers who were previously safe in the United States. Why? Because he has signaled to every corporation in America that they can threaten to offshore jobs in exchange for business-friendly tax benefits and incentives. Even corporations that weren’t thinking of offshoring jobs will most probably be reevaluating their stance this morning. And who would pay for the high cost for tax cuts that go to the richest businessmen in America? The working class of America.  

Let’s be clear. United Technologies is not going broke. Last year, it made a profit of $7.6 billion and received more than $6 billion in defense contracts. It has also received more than $50 million from the Export-Import Bank and very generous tax breaks. In 2014, United Technologies gave its former chief executive Louis Chenevert a golden parachute worth more than $172 million. Last year, the company’s five highest-paid executives made more than $50 million. The firm also spent $12 billion to inflate its stock price instead of using that money to invest in new plants and workers.

Does that sound like a company that deserves more corporate welfare from our government? Trump’s Band-Aid solution is only making the problem of wealth inequality in America even worse.

I said I would work with Trump if he was serious about the promises he made to members of the working class. But after running a campaign pledging to be tough on corporate America, Trump has hypocritically decided to do the exact opposite. He wants to treat corporate irresponsibility with kid gloves. The problem with our rigged economy is not that our policies have been too tough on corporations; it’s that we haven’t been tough enough.


We need to re-instill an ethic of corporate patriotism. We need to send a very loud and clear message to corporate America: The era of outsourcing is over. Instead of offshoring jobs, the time has come for you to start bringing good-paying jobs back to America.

If United Technologies or any other company wants to keep outsourcing decent-paying American jobs, those companies must pay an outsourcing tax equal to the amount of money they expect to save by moving factories to Mexico or other low-wage countries.  They should not receive federal contracts or other forms of corporate welfare. They must pay back all of the tax breaks and other corporate welfare they have received from the federal government. And they must not be allowed to reward their executives with stock options, bonuses or golden parachutes for outsourcing jobs to low-wage countries. I will soon be introducing the Outsourcing Prevention Act, which will address exactly that.
If Donald Trump won’t stand up for America’s working class, we must.