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

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Hirunika exposes ruses adopted by criminal MPs to get hospitalized -One M.P. has cashed in on his testicles..!

- Hirunika strips nude the Doctor mafia !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -07.Dec.2016, 11.30PM) While it has become the practice , when MP’s are incarcerated to feign sicknesses , and get admitted to prison hospital in order to enjoy all the comforts  and pleasures , there was also an M.P. who said he wanted to  protect his testicles (rotten?) , and obtained pillows , mattresses and mosquito nets , said Hirunika Premachandra M.P. in Parliament yesterday (06) 
When LeN inquired from the prison hospital in this regard ,  it came to light it was none other than the notorious  fraudster Udaya Gammanpila who wanted mattresses and pillows to rest his testicles ( to rock them to sleep ?) . These crooks and rascals would never have had it so good , not even in their homes..!
The corruption and frauds in the prison hospital of the underworld maintained on public funds were exposed by  Lanka e news over a long period . LeN also revealed the unhindered corrupt activities of the hospital’s chief medical officer and his assistant , Dr. Lakshman Jayamanne and Malintha Warnajith respectively, and today Hirunika also had the misfortune to make these  exposures at length. 
Hirunika while disclosing   how these crooked and criminal M.P.s are resorting to ruses to get admitted to the prison hospital  said , one foreign drug peddler by claiming his weight is not enough vis a vis his height got himself admitted to the hospital  ; and  Duminda Silva who is facing death sentence celebrated his  birthday party while being in the underworld prison hospital . She also exposed  how Dr. Jayamanne he tried to exert force on a ‘party ‘ woman prisoner to have sex with him. 
Hirunika’s video footage covering her  full revelation is hereunder 
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by     (2016-12-07 19:21:56)

A breath devoid of tobacco smoke!

A breath devoid of tobacco smoke!

Dec 07, 2016

A huge debate has arisen in the country owing to the eradication to some extent the tobacco smoke.In order to evade from the health hazards from numerous quarters like human resources , print and electronic media the message had been sent enlightening the general public. It is reported that the main cause of cancer has been attributed to tobacco and hence the health authorities have made gigantic efforts to reduce the smoking habits drastically. In this sense the government has increased the prices of cigarettes increasing taxes in order to discourage and curb this habit.

The persons addicted to smoking as well as chewing betel are commonly seen to us daily. For certain to this habit there are only fever criticisms but for smoking it is not so as not only the smokers but those in the vicinity of the smokers become passive smokers.Hence for the smokers and the non smokers the results are not conducive to both factions.This fact in now known to all.
Accordingly the endeavour and strategy of the government and many civil , and voluntary organizations is to discourage this inclination. At the  Apeksha Cancer hospital premises in Maharagam on the 05th instant in parallel to liquor volunteer service day a workshop was conducted by the local and overseas young volunteer service unit on the hazards of cigarettes, betel in order to educate the general public.
.The theme was “a breadth devoid of smoke for us, to you, our children be inherited”.The endeavour of the organizers was that.they are eternally holding hands with the Apeksha cancer hospital. This was the first phase of this campaign and initially they indent to eradicate those personnel who indulge in these practices on the sly in the hospital premises itself..One other motive was to stop marketing these items in the vicinity of the cancer hospital.The intention is not to enforce this by law but for them to individually refrain from these acts.
It is also the intention make the public aware of the dangerous repercussions that lead when cigarettes and betel are addicted. In order to have a society completely devoid of these habits is the motive of this endeavour. Leaflets in this regard too had been distributed around the Apeska cancer hospital and it is learnt that the complete cooperation of all doctors, nurses and the hospital staff were received.
Another important programme of a library concept was initiated..The daily routine of the patients and the relatives who come to the hospital wanted to be changed. This concept would help them to deviate from the normal monotonous life my making them indulged in reading. Through a library concept This help to change mental attitudes and development of mental vision. With this hospital culture could be changed in the anticipated objective of the organizers.

Ampara farmers demand money to buy fertilizer

An agitation by farmers organized by All Ceylon Farmers’ Federation demanding that the money given to farmers in place of the fertilizer subsidy should be given immediately was held at Ampara town today (7th).
A large number of farmers from Ampara District participated protesting against the decision to make available the money during ‘Maha’ season.
The National Organizer of All Ceylon Farmers’ Federation Namal Karunaratna, former JVP Parliamentarian Wasantha Piyatissa and many leaders of farmer associations were present.
ampara1ampara2ampara3ampara4 ampara5ampara5 

International forum in Colombo to launch a ‘battle’ against kidney disease


Audited fund for intelligent giving and transparent receiving

Sri Lanka to hold international conference to tackle chronic kidney disease


by Sanath Nanayakkare- 

A high-profile international forum will be held at the Galle Face Hotel, Colombo on December 19, to finalize the mechanism of a foundation that aims to effectively deal with, and prevent chronic kidney disease in Sri Lanka and worldwide.

The International Society of Nephrology(ISN) based in Brussels will be here to collaborate with Gardiner Foundation, Sri Lanka, led by reputed Sri Lankan business magnate Sanjiv Gardiner who has been assigned the role of ambassador for prevention of CKD, by President Maithripala Sirisena.

The foundation named as ISN-Gardiner Foundation intends to rally global support in terms of funds and resources from donors for renal healthcare needs of patients worldwide. As transparency and integrity are key in this exercise, the Fund is to be audited by KPMG.

"The sad truth is that not all funds and foundations put their money and donor-resources where their mission is,"Chandra Mohotti, Senior Vice President Galle Face Hotel told this journalist.

"The ISN-Gardiner Foundation will make a highly reliable partnership in this effort. Why do I say this? ISN is the worldwide organization of Nephrology based in Brussels. And Sanjiv Gardiner is a reputed business magnate who heads a conglomerate of varied successful business ventures in Sri Lanka and overseas. Sanjiv is the chairman of Galle Face Group which owns and manages a domestic chain of hotels including its iconic 150-year-old Galle Face Hotel in Colombo".

"Taking a globalized view, Gardiner has pondered to give this presidential mission an international perspective, beyond Sri Lanka, to the Asian region or even farther. Gardiner being Sri Lankan President’s ambassador in this exercise, the Fund should gain great credibility. Besides, the managers of the Fund are to follow best practices on a par with other globally trusted funds related to healthcare".

"What’s unique here is, the donations will be redistributed to any country which has people suffering from the disease. For example, if the Foundation gets five dialysis machines, one may go to Bangladesh, two may go to India and the remaining one may be put to use in Sri Lanka. So, this is about fair allocation of both funds and resources received from donors around the world, to CKD victims anywhere in the world.".

"Finally, let me recap it, borderless donors for borderless CKD patients," Mohotti said.

The ISN and the Gardiner Foundation have discussed to appoint KPMG to audit the Fund for obvious reasons. The entire diplomatic community in Colombo will be invited to the event with a view to enlisting their governments’ support to this humanitarian cause. Foreign correspondents of prestigious international news agencies based in Sri Lanka too will be there to give wide coverage to the Forum where President Maithripala Sirisena will be the chief guest.

This is the first time the ISN has partnered with an organization outside of medical related associations for a partnership of this nature.

Britain fines Pfizer record £84m for huge drug price hike

Britain fines Pfizer record £84m for huge drug price hike
 Dec 07, 2016
Britain's competition watchdog has fined Pfizer a record £84.2m for its role in ramping up the cost of an epilepsy drug by as much as 2,600%.
The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) also fined Flynn Pharma £5.2m for overcharging for phenytoin sodium capsules, following a dramatic price hike in 2012. 
The CMA had first accused the companies over the matter last year.
As a result of the price increase, spending on the capsules by the National Health Service rose from £2m a year in 2012 to about £50m in 2013. 
The CMA said UK prices for the capsules were many times higher than elsewhere in Europe.
Pfizer used to market the medicine itself, under the brand name Epanutin, but it sold the rights to Flynn, a privately owned British company, in September 2012, after which the product was debranded and the price soared. 
The decision to debrand the drug, or make it available as a generic product, meant that it was no longer subject to price regulation.
"The companies deliberately exploited the opportunity offered by debranding to hike up the price for a drug which is relied upon by many thousands of patients," Philip Marsden, chairman of the CMA's case decision group, said today. 
"These extraordinary price rises have cost the NHS and the taxpayer tens of millions of pounds," he added.
Pfizer, in a statement, disputed the CMA's decision and said it planned to appeal all aspects of the verdict.
The US drugmaker said the medicine had been loss-making and it was therefore forced to consider whether it could continue supplying it.
Pfizer added that the price set by Flynn was actually 25-40% less than the cost of an equivalent tablet form of the medicine from another supplier.
http://www.rte.ie/-

President And PM Quash Investigation Into Rāvaya-Gate


Colombo Telegraph
December 7, 2016
Ravaya, the newspaper that often champions good governance, justice and democracy, has succeeded in suppressing an inquiry into allegations that its long-time editor Victor Ivan had pocketed millions of rupees in gross violation of the Companies Law, thanks to support from President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
Ivan
Ivan
“We cannot investigate it, we are under pressure, you should make a complain to the police commission” a high ranking police officer told Colombo Telegraph.
He was referring to a complaint lodged at the Police Fraud Bureau on the 02nd of July 2015 by Public Interest Rights Activist and Lawyer Nagananda Kodituwakku, who also complained to the Registrar of Companies D.N.R. Siriwardena about the same matter.
On the 6th of July 2015, commenting on the allegations against Victor Ivan pocketing Rs 10 million of Ravaya funds, D.N.R.Siriwardena, the Registrar of Companies told Colombo Telegraph that the entire transaction is illegal and completely out of the order and that an investigation is to be launched into the transaction.
Even though the Registrar of Companies told Colombo Telegraph that the Ravaya documents were kept under lock and key, Colombo Telegraph has managed to obtain the relevant documents of Ravaya which were submitted to Companies Registrar. All the documents were endorsed and issued to us by his office saying “documents not recognised/endorsed by the Registrar of Companies”. See the picture below:ravaya
Although Colombo Telegraph was able to speak with the Registrar on two occasions, all efforts to contact him for further clarification have failed.
Colombo Telegraph, at the time, published damning evidence to the effect that the newspaper had provided false information in several public appeals through ‘Ravaya Solidarity’ to keep the newspaper afloat. Although there was no intimation that money thus collected would be used to pay Victor Ivan, the former editor took Rs 5 million of the Rs 12.7 million contributed by hundreds of donors.
Speaking to Colombo Telegraph on the 8th of December, 2015, Kodituwakku said: “Ivan has no right to claim Rs 20 million from Ravaya. On the one hand Ivan has never invested Rs 20 million in Ravaya and on the other is Ravaya is a company limited by guarantee and operating as a not-for-profit organization, much like an NGO. I made a complaint to the Registrar of Companies, and he asked me to make a complaint to the Fraud Bureau as well, which I did. Yesterday the company registrar informed me that the Ravaya documents are kept under lock and key. When I contacted the company registrar two days ago he said that the investigations are proceeding.”

Haven’t the Media coolies that published canards about Basil’s case committed contempt of court ?

LEN logo
(Lanka-e-News -07.Dec.2016, 11.30PM)  The news report yesterday noon  of ‘Ada Derana’   and ‘Hiru news,’ the two pro Rajapakse media coolies   that the case against the  two suspects including Basil Rajapakse based on charges of misuse of Divineguma  funds  purportedly to print 5 million almanacs during the corrupt lawless  Rajapakse era had been withdrawn by the Attorney General (AG) is an absolute  lie.  
The AG who withdrew the indictments owing to technical flaws, has again presented the indictments in court after  two hours. Consequently the case against the suspects including  ex minister Basil will continue. The aforementioned two media coolies by revealing part truth had deceived the public most unscrupulously. 
It is a well and widely known fact that minister of justice Wijedasa Rajapakse and Hemantha Warnakulasuriya  moved heaven and earth  to obtain an Interpol warrant based on charges of contempt of court against Lanka e news,  accusing the latter of publishing a photograph pertaining to a case which in fact was not published by LeN.  Therefore the people are intently watching what measures  this so called duo with a morbid obsession for ‘contempt of court’ is going to take against the two media Institutions for publishing a canard  ,deliberately to deceive and dupe the public in relation to a court  action. 
(Photographs of the  news canards of Ada Derana and Hiru are hereunder )
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by     (2016-12-07 19:25:13)

Canada’s Greens stand up to pro-Israel bullies

Green Party leader Elizabeth May speaks into microphone at podiumGreen Party leader Elizabeth May has failed to grasp the depth of support for the Palestinian cause both within and outside her party. (Laurel L. Russwurm)
Yves Engler-5 December 2016
The Israel lobby has suffered an epic fail in Canada. An attempt at persuading the country’s Green Party to drop its support for the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement galvanized many activists. The result was that Canada’s Greens have emphatically demanded that Palestinian rights be respected.
In August, the Green Party’s members voted to back BDS measures targeting those sectors of the Israeli economy which profit from the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. As is par for the course, Israeli nationalist groups labeled the resolution “anti-Semitic.”
Describing herself as “broken-hearted,” the Greens’ leader Elizabeth May threatened to resign if the party didn’t revisit the issue.
May, then, announced that a special general membership meeting would be held at the start of December to discuss its stance on Palestine.
In September, she fired three members of her shadow cabinet for defending the party’s recently passed policy from attacks by the head of the British Columbia Greens.
But May overplayed her hand.
Caught in the Ottawa and corporate media bubble, she failed to grasp the depth of support for the Palestinian cause both within and outside her party. She also underestimated Palestine solidarity groups’ organizational capacities.

Overwhelming

In the lead-up to last weekend’s special general meeting, Dimitri Lascaris, one of the three fired by May, spokein defense of BDS at town hall meetings across Canada.
Support for the Palestine policy was overwhelming during these events.
Despite media claims to the contrary – “Green Party losing members, riding associations as BDS controversy highlights infighting,” according to one National Post headline – the party has more to gain by aligning with the growing number of Canadians critical of the federal government’s support for Israeli violence and colonialism.
Facing the prospect of a humiliating defeat at the special meeting, May and other party leaders backed an alternative resolution, which was approved at last weekend’s meeting.
An explanatory note issued by the Greens claims that the party “explicitly rejects” calls for boycotting the State of Israel. The note indicates that the Greens could not support the BDS movement as its goals do not include “supporting the right of the State of Israel to exist.”
Nonetheless, the new resolution supports the targeted use of boycotts, divestment and sanctions as tactics in response to violence and oppression.
It also backs the three main demands made by the BDS movement: an end to Israel’s colonization of Palestinian lands; full equality between Israeli Jews and Palestinian citizens of Israel; and guaranteeing the right to returnof Palestinian refugees.
The resolution calls, too, for an end to the siege of Gaza and insists that Canada divests from companies that benefit from Israel’s activities in the occupied West Bank. It also urges the renegotiation of the free trade agreement between Canada and Israel so that goods produced within Israel’s settlements in the West Bank are “explicitly” excluded. The resolution also promotes the “indefinite suspension” of all military cooperation and trade in weapons and surveillance equipment.
The new resolution was swiftly denounced by Canada’s pro-Israel lobby. The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs in Toronto claimed that the Greens had been “coopted by extreme activists.”

Pressure on NDP

The Green vote puts pressure on the historically left-leaning New Democratic Party (NDP) to take a similar position.
Some political activists associated with the NDP are sympathetic to the Palestine solidarity movement.
Sid Ryan, former head of the Ontario Federation of Labour, signed a recent appeal addressed to members of the Canadian Greens. Also backed by the authors Yann Martel and Rawi Hage and musicians Richard Reed Parry, from the group Arcade Fire, and Bruce Cockburn, the letter urges Greens not to “weaken or reverse the vote to support Palestinian rights” taken in August.
Ryan is being spoken of as a possible candidate for NDP leader. A website urging him to enter the contest for that position celebrates his advocacy for Palestinian rights, including his support for the BDS movement.
No matter who wins the campaign to become NDP leader in October it’s hard to imagine they will be worse than outgoing leader Tom Mulcair, who has described himself as an ally to Israel “in all circumstances.”
For the pro-Israel groups, the Green vote will sting. Rather than forcing party members to cower, their attacks focused attention on the Palestinian struggle for equality and justice.

Air strike kills 55 civilians in western Iraq

Iraq's speaker of parliament demanded a probe into the incident that left 12 women and 19 children dead
Nearly 2,000 soldiers and hundreds of civilians were killed in Iraq in November (AFP)
Wednesday 7 December 2016
Air strikes killed dozens of people, including many women and children, in an Islamic State-held town near Iraq's western border with Syria on Wednesday, two parliamentarians and local hospital sources said.
They said the air strikes hit a busy market in the town of Qaim, in Iraq's Anbar province, describing the incident as a massacre. The hospital sources said 55 civilians were killed, including 12 women and 19 children, in three air strikes.
The bodies of eight militants were delivered to Qaim hospital morgue, the hospital sources said.
A spokesperson for the provincial council of Anbar claimed the strike was carried out by an Iraqi aircraft in the afternoon and demanded a government probe.
"The strike hit a market at peak hour, there were retirees queueing up pick up their pension, people collecting salaries and social security payments," Eid Ammash said.
"Entire families were killed," Ammash said.
Maath al-Jughaifi, a tribal leader in Haditha, the nearest city, said "between 70 people and 80 people were killed" in Al-Qaim, but claimed the strike was carried out by the US-led coalition that has carried out thousands of strikes against IS.
There was no immediate comment from Iraq's Joint Operations Command supervising the fight against IS or from the US-led coalition.
Iraq's speaker of parliament Salim al-Juburi condemned the air strike by saying in a statement that the attack "targeted a market area for civilians and resulted in the death and injury of dozens of them".
He said he "holds the government responsible for such mistakes" and demanded the immediate launch of an investigation into the alleged strike.
If confirmed, the blunder would be one of the worst cases of civilians being killed in strikes in Iraq since the start of the air campaign against the Islamic State (IS) group in 2014.
Officials in Anbar, the western province in which Al-Qaim is located, said dozens were killed in the afternoon strike, although AFP could not reach sources in the town to confirm the casualty toll.
Amaq, an IS-affiliated propaganda website, released a video purporting to show the aftermath of the strike and claimed 120 people were killed.
AFP could not authenticate the footage, which showed devastation in a market area and a large number of dead and wounded strewn across the street or being treated.
Al-Qaim lies a few kilometres from the border with Syria, around 320 kilometres (200 miles) west of the capital Baghdad, and is the last major town in Anbar still under IS control.
Nearly 2,000 soldiers and hundreds of civilians were killed in Iraq in November, the UN said on 2 December, in a "staggering" spike in deaths coinciding with operations to retake the Islamic State-held city of Mosul.
The figure increased threefold from October, when tens of thousands of troops launched an assault to retake the Islamic State group's last major Iraqi bastion of Mosul.
According to the UN mission in Iraq's monthly tally, 1,959 Iraqi forces were killed last month and at least 450 others wounded.
That figure is just under half the number of American soldiers killed after the US invaded the country in 2003.
The toll includes members of the army, police who are engaged in combat, the Kurdish peshmerga, interior ministry forces and pro-government paramilitaries.
The UN statement also said at least 926 civilians were killed, bringing to 2,885 the number of Iraqis killed in acts of terrorism, violence and armed conflict last month.
"The casualty figures are staggering, with civilians accounting for a significant number of the victims," said the top UN envoy in Iraq, Jan Kubis.

Ties between Russia and the Taliban worry Afghan, U.S. officials

FILE PHOTO - Members of the Taliban gather at the site of the execution of three men accused of murdering a couple during a robbery in Ghazni province, Afghanistan April 18, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

By Hamid Shalizi and Josh Smith | KABUL-Thu Dec 8, 2016

Afghan and American officials are increasingly worried that any deepening of ties between Russia and Taliban militants fighting to topple the government in Kabul could complicate an already precarious security situation.

Russian officials have denied they provide aid to the insurgents, who are contesting large swathes of territory and inflicting heavy casualties, and say their limited contacts are aimed at bringing the Taliban to the negotiating table.

Leaders in Kabul say Russian support for the Afghan Taliban appears to be mostly political so far.
But a series of recent meetings they say has taken place in Moscow and Tajikistan has made Afghan intelligence and defence officials nervous about more direct support including weapons or funding.

FILE PHOTO - Members of the Taliban stand at the site of the execution of three men in Ghazni province, Afghanistan, April 18, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

A senior Afghan security official called Russian support for the Taliban a "dangerous new trend", an analysis echoed by the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General John Nicholson.

He told reporters at a briefing in Washington last week that Russia had joined Iran and Pakistan as countries with a "malign influence" in Afghanistan, and said Moscow was lending legitimacy to the Taliban.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova pushed back at Nicholson's comments in a briefing in Moscow on Wednesday, calling them naive and inaccurate.

"We have repeatedly said that Russia is not carrying out any secret talks with the Taliban and is not providing it with any kind of support," she said.

Zakharova said Russia favours a negotiated peace in Afghanistan, which can only happen by cultivating contacts with all players, including the Taliban.

The Russian embassy in Kabul has scheduled a press conference for Thursday to discuss Afghan-Russian relations, amid reports that the Afghan parliament plans to investigate Russia's ties with the Taliban.

ANOTHER "GREAT GAME"?

Afghanistan has long been the scene of international intrigue and intervention, with the British and Russians jockeying for power during the 19th Century "Great Game," and the United States helping Pakistan provide weapons and funding to Afghan rebels fighting Soviet forces in the 1980s.

Taliban officials told Reuters that the group has had significant contacts with Moscow since at least 2007, adding that Russian involvement did not extend beyond "moral and political support".

"We had a common enemy," said one senior Taliban official. "We needed support to get rid of the United States and its allies in Afghanistan and Russia wanted all foreign troops to leave Afghanistan as quickly as possible."

Moscow has been critical of the United States and NATO over their handling of the war in Afghanistan, but Russia initially helped provide helicopters for the Afghan military and agreed to a supply route for coalition materials through Russia.

Most of that cooperation has fallen apart as relations between Russia and the West deteriorated in recent years over the conflicts in Ukraine and Syria.

Incoming U.S. president Donald Trump, who takes office in January, has signalled a desire to improve relations with Russia, meaning future U.S. and Russian policies could change.
FOREIGN MEETINGS

In recent months, Taliban representatives have held several meetings with Russian officials, according to both Taliban and Afghan government sources.

Those meetings included a visit to Tajikistan by the Taliban shadow governor of Kunduz province, Mullah Abdul Salam, said Kunduz police chief Qasim Jangalbagh.

Another recent meeting occurred in Moscow itself, according to an official at the presidential palace in Kabul.

Afghan officials did not produce evidence of direct Russian aid, but recent cross-border flights by unidentified helicopters and seizures of brand new "Russian-made" guns had raised concerns that regional actors may be playing a larger role, Jangalbagh said.

"If the Taliban get their hands on anti-aircraft guns provided, for example, by Russia, then it is a game-changer, and forget about peace," said another senior Afghan security official.

ISLAMIC STATE OR UNITED STATES?

According to Afghan and U.S. officials, Russian representatives have maintained that government security forces, backed by U.S. special forces and air strikes, have not done enough to stem the growth of Islamic State in Afghanistan.

Militants loyal to the radical Middle East-based network have carved out territory along the border with Pakistan, and have found themselves fighting not only Afghan and foreign troops, but also the Taliban, who compete for land, influence, and fighters.

Taliban officials dismissed the idea that their ties to Russia had anything to do with fighting Islamic State.

"In early 2008, when Russia began supporting us, ISIS(Islamic State) didn't exist anywhere in the world," the senior Taliban official said. "Their sole purpose was to strengthen us against the U.S. and its allies."

That was echoed by Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, who said "ISIS is not an issue".

Nicholson said the talk of Islamic State is a smokescreen designed to justify Russian policies.

"Their (Russia's) narrative goes something like this: that the Taliban are the ones fighting Islamic State, not the Afghan government," Nicholson said.

"So this public legitimacy that Russia lends to the Taliban is not based on fact, but is used as a way to essentially undermine the Afghan government and the NATO efforts and bolster the belligerents."

(Additional reporting by Jibran Ahmad in Pakistan and Tatiana Ustinova and Andrew Osborn in Moscow; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

Ratko Mladić must get life sentence, say war crimes prosecutors

 The then commander of the Bosnian Serb army, General Ratko Mladić, in 1994. Photograph: Pascal Guyot/AFP/Getty Images

 World affairs editor-Wednesday 7 December 2016 

Prosecutors at The Hague war crimes tribunal called for a life sentence to be imposed on the Bosnian Serb military commander, Ratko Mladić, for genocide and crimes against humanity committed by his forces in the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

Any lesser penalty would be “an insult to the victims, living and dead, and an affront to justice” said Alan Tieger, closing the prosecution’s case at the end of a trial that has taken more than four and a half years at the international criminal tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY).

Mladić, now aged 74, listened to the prosecutors’ closing arguments impassively, watching as they showed videos of him from the war, striding through captured towns, issuing orders to his soldiers.

Ratko Mladić at the international criminal tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague, December 2016. Photograph: AP

He was a senior officer in the Yugoslav army in 1991 when the socialist federation fell apart. He commanded Bosnian Serb forces that cut the country in two when Bosnia declared its independence the next year and remained in command through the more than three years of war, in which 100,000 people died.

Mladić is accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity and two counts of genocide. One is for the siege of Sarajevo, where his troops ringed the city for 46 months, the longest siege in modern history, subjecting its residents to relentless shelling and sniping.

“The time has come for Ratko Mladić to be held accountable for each of his victims and all the communities he destroyed,” Tieger said. “Nobody can even imagine the depth of suffering for which Mladić is responsible,” he added.

In their three-day closing statement, prosecutors played a recording of an intercepted radio conversation in May 1992 with one of his officers, in which Mladić ordered artillery fire on two Sarajevo districts “because not many Serbs live there”.

“Let’s drive them out of their minds, so they cannot sleep,” he is heard saying.

One of the prosecution lawyers, Adam Weber, told the tribunal that Mladić’s “personal approval … was necessary” for Serb forces to shell the city using a specially modified bomb that was hurled into central Sarajevo in the later stages of the war.

The second genocide count was for the slaughter of more than 7,000 Muslim men and boys from the town of Srebrenica. Most of them were taken away in buses after the supposedly UN-protected enclave fell to Mladić’s troops, lined up and shot, with their bodies dumped in mass graves.

“There’s too much pain, there’s too much for any of us to truly comprehend the nature and scope of the shared misery of the women and survivors of the Srebrenica community,” said Peter McCloskey, a prosecution lawyer. “We can, however, strike back, as mandated by the security council with the creation of this tribunal to expose the horrific crimes of this war and try those most responsible for them.”

McCloskey added: “We have identified the key men responsible for it. We have Mladić in the dock answering for his crimes.”

Mladić has pleaded innocent to the charges and his defence counsel will make its closing statements between 9 and 13 December. A verdict is expected next year.

The Mladić trial is one of the last cases to be heard by the ICTY, which was set up in 1993. The Bosnian Serb political leader, Radovan Karadžić, is to appeal his 40-year sentence, which was issued by the court in March this year. The failure to impose life imprisonment, despite the fact that Karadžić was found guilty of genocide for the Srebrenica massacre, sparked fury among Bosnian survivors.

Ratko Mladić and Radovan Karadžić in April 1995. Photograph: Ranko Cukovic/Reuters

Refik Hodzic, a survivor from Prijedor, and now communications director for the International Centre for Transitional Justice, said the ICTY trials had not succeeded in preventing a wave of revisionism and denial in the Serb-controlled half of Bosnia, where some of the convicted war criminals are hailed as heroes.
The proceedings in The Hague, he said, “presented the reality of the roles played by Mladic and other cogs in that machine, which has undertaken this dirty work. “

“One could clearly see from the evidence presented that Mladić, Karadžić and others from the Serb leadership of the time were not mythical characters – neither monsters, as the Bosniak victim narrative paints them, nor heroes and “fathers of the nation” as they are presented by the dominant Serb politic – but banal, self-centred opportunists drunk on the unchecked power to command lives and deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.”

Fidel Castro Tragedy of revolution


Uditha Devapriya-a2016-12-06

Last week, for the first time, my column attracted censure. Someone using a pseudonym took me to task over two points: my indifference towards the American election and what was unfortunately perceived as my championing of Fidel Castro. I answered him twice but could not, for some unfathomable reason, get him to see my perspective. This person was adamant that I was refusing to see Donald Trump's demagoguery, his blatant racism, and his stance on immigration even as I clearly noted that a United States under Hillary Clinton would be no better, at least in terms of that great country's foreign policy.
As for Castro, I hold no candles for him. The Cuba he governed languished without democracy for almost half a century. Dissent was out of the question, criticism not at all tolerated. Even the slightest hint of sarcasm, wit, and unconventionality was met with imprisonment: sometimes for days, sometimes for weeks, more often than not for decades. It is indeed unfortunate that those who worship the likes of Castro, Che Guevara, and the Sandinistas are entranced by their garb and their supposedly ascetic existence. The fact is, there was nothing ascetic about these people when it came to governing their citizens.

The 'Miami Herald' is published and read in Florida, which is 90 miles from Cuba. It is mainly catered to the same community that celebrated the death of Castro: naturally, what gets published in it is quite critical of him. In an op-ed (titled "Red ink: The high human cost of the Cuban Revolution") published therein, Glenn Garvin goes through some compelling statistics, all of which centre on the human cost of Castro's regime.

Castro's cronies

Garvin essentially infers that, given the obscurity which shrouds much of that regime even today, it is difficult to get at a proper number for those who were killed, imprisoned, or made to disappear. Castro's cronies probably took a leaf out of Nazi Germany's book here, after all the Nuremberg Trials were made possible because of one mistake: the Nazis archived each and every atrocity they committed, a virtual treasure trove for those who wanted to prosecute the likes of Goering and Eichmann after the War.
There are two main sources that enumerate the murdered in Cuba. R. J. Rummel, the late historian from the University of Hawaii, estimated the death toll at anywhere between 35,000 and 141,000, with a median of 73,000. However, the Cuba Archive, a project which documents human rights abuses in that country, placed the toll at somewhere around 7,200, a much lower figure. This is not conclusive, though: Castro is reported to have killed as many as 5,000 immediately after the 1959 Revolution that brought him to power. Clearly, it would be a bit remiss to assume that from 1959 to the 2000s only 2,000 more people were killed.

Statistics can get controversial. In the mid-nineties a collage (drawn up by Cuban Americans in Miami) bearing the names of 10,000 countrymen killed by Castro's regime was challenged when many of those 10,000 proved to be alive or to have died of natural causes. Cuba's interventions in other countries – most notably in Africa – which helped push to power (at least temporarily) Marxist governments are officially said to have caused 4,000 deaths. But a Cuban Air Force General who defected put the number of those killed in one country alone (Angola) at 10,000. Meanwhile, there still is debate over the death toll of those who tried to escape the regime: the Harvard-trained economist Armando Lago put it (until 2003) at 77,000, but this was soon questioned as a shaky figure. Clearly, there is no consensus here, though not for a lack of trying.

Different story

I am wary of dogmatists from both sides of a debate and I am wary of those who pretend to sleep when carefully documented statistics tell a different story. The truth is that Castro, and his (intellectual) forefathers before him, provided an absolution for much of the garb that adorns revolutionaries. There is nothing romantic about dictatorships, nothing idealistic about turncoats. What happened in 1959 in Havana, to put it simply, should not have turned into a bloodbath that survived on propaganda, State terror, and cosmetic nationalism. However, this does not and will not belittle the propaganda of those ideologically opposed to such bloodbaths for less than innocent reasons.

I never get tired of reading 'Granta', the quarterly literary magazine published in the United Kingdom. Last year I was gifted with two whole boxes of these priceless gems, by a writer I am yet to meet. Just the other day I was reading an issue which centred on Russia, that is, the collapse of Communism in the Soviet Bloc. There were some rather interesting pieces on what revolutions to do the truth and how the truth gets contorted by those who wish to attack revolutions.

One of them caught my attention at once. Orlando Figes, in an article titled "Burying the Bones", 
encounters members of the clergy and ordinary citizens on the day they buried the remains of Nicholas II (the last Tsar of Russia) in 1998. By that time, soon to close in on a century and a millennium, Boris Yeltsin's regime was facing acute food shortages, rising poverty and crime, political turbulence, and of course widening economic inequalities. That, however, didn't ruffle the people of St Petersburg, as they watched the man who ruled Russia with an iron fist, who sanctioned anti-Jewish pogroms and authored mass executions of peasants who protested against his regime, with an almost mystical sense of awe.

Orthodox Church

In his article, Figes talks with those who idolise Nicholas and his family, including a priest from the Orthodox Church that would beatify the Tsar as a saint. When asked about the atrocities perpetrated by the man, the good Father replies that the demonstrations, uprisings, and protests over inequalities were not peaceful and more startlingly, were in fact sinful (try telling that to those starving on the streets today).

When asked about the anti-Jewish pogroms authored by him (which continued even after the Revolution), well, the good Father has only one excuse to trot out: that the Tsar did not directly sanction it.

Figes ends his piece with a telling comment: "Most people know very little about Nicholas or any of the Tsars, since the subject was always poorly taught and grossly distorted in Soviet schools. There are just as many gaps in post-Tsarist, Soviet history. The result has been that myths and conspiracy theories are substituted for historical knowledge."

The point I am trying to get at here is that no matter how repressive a dictatorship may be, that does not and will not absolve the excesses of a dictatorship which existed before it. Those who have an axe to grind with Castro, one can surmise, may be genuinely horrified at his malignant attitude towards dissidents, but I wonder: what of the many among them who belittle if not trivialize the excesses committed by Fulgencio Batista?

Batista and Castro

Do they not realize that inasmuch as both Batista and Castro were dictators, what divided the one from the other was this: under Castro, strides were made in healthcare, education, and poverty alleviation, strides which as one commentator pointed out to me the other day would take decades for the West to accomplish. What did Batista have to show during his regime? Only the Ugly American.

The mainstream media were always quick to ridicule Castro, sometimes for the gaudiest reasons. Once when Castro visited New York to attend a United Nations summit, an American news agency reported that after his entourage left the hotel they had stayed in, the management had to clean up the chicken bones the Cubans had left behind: a half-truth that certainly contributed to the image of the man as a devilish glutton. 'Cuba is where Lucifer lives,' Michael Moore sarcastically says in his documentary on the US healthcare system, Siko, just as he and a bunch of American patients arrive in Havana for a treatment denied to them in their own country.

In one sense, the attitude of the US Government to Cuba, right until the Obama presidency, showed a lot of hypocrisy. Forget their involvement with the Batista regime. Just think of the doublespeak they were enforcing on the rest of the world when they dealt with Castro. " Castro is a tyrant who uses brutal methods to enforce a bankrupt vision and I will use my veto powers to ensure that the four-decade old embargo on Cuba remains in place," George W. Bush once declared, even as his envoys in Sri Lanka were forcing our representatives to negotiate with the LTTE, who by no stretch of the imagination could be called freedom fighters.

International aid

The US Government cut off international aid to Cuba in 1992, when the dubiously titled and drafted 'Cuban Democracy Act' starved a country which, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, was without a proper international sponsor. The tragedy with today's system of international sanctions, I have always felt, is its failure to distinguish a tyrant from his or her citizens, a tragedy that has cost the US and us (pun intended) a great many lives and a great many dollars. This came out most discernibly in much of the history of the relations between Washington and Havana.

The world had moved away from Communism when, in 2003, Castro declared that his country was transitioning to it. He said this as a response to the then newly established 'Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba', co-chaired by Condoleeza Rice. The wording of that Commission itself was dubious: Bush would argue that his government was not waiting for the day of Cuban freedom (which would have come from within the country, organically), but rather the day of freedom in Cuba (which was doublespeak for intervention from outside).

Barack Obama, always the man of many words, opted for negotiation over conflict. Castro, by then an invalid who had retired as a would-be elder statesman, distrusted the Americans and openly criticized what could be considered as a U-turn by his government (led by his brother, Raul). That distrust has, one must admit, less to do with his affirmation of Communism than the history of US intervention in the region. With the election of Donald Trump, who is more Bush than Bush himself, one can't tell where relations between Cuba and the US will go to. One can only conjecture.

And at the end of the day, conjecture does not help. I will therefore conclude.

Assassination attempts

People talk of Batista and Castro. The former died in 1973, having taken away more than 30 million dollars from his own country's Treasury when his government was toppled in 1959. The latter died last week, having survived almost 640 assassination attempts. The former was the West's playboy, the latter the playboy of those opposed to the West. In the much hyped debate between these two however, there is one name we forget: José Miró Cardona.

Who was José Miró Cardona? He was a member of the anti-Batista Unity Group that tried a peaceful negotiation with the man. In August 1958 he wrote a letter to Dwight D. Eisenhower protesting American involvement in the Cuban civil war. He joined forces with Castro and was with him right until they seized power. He was Prime Minister for six weeks that year. He was appointed as his country's Ambassador to Spain in May the following year. In July however, he resigned his post and sought refuge in the Argentine Embassy. By 1961, he was in the United States. The Kennedy administration would soon hail him as a liberator.

Cardona was a moderate. Like all moderates, he was sidelined. Revolutions do not end with those who author them: they end only with the institutionalization of the values those authors are supposed to stand for. Such values can only be enforced by reformists and moderates. Cardona did not live to see them inscribed in the land of his birth.

What else can we say? Fidel Castro (and we must be honest to acknowledge this) needed force. He monopolized it. Along the way, he alienated those who called for reforms. The rest is history. And history, as Regi Siriwardena once wrote, is open. So open that we are yet to determine whether those people on the streets of Havana mourning Castro were forced to lament the death of their former leader.

UDAKDEV1@GMAIL.COM