Peace for the World

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

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Abraham Lincoln, the United States and the world

His assassination made him a martyr, but what was Lincoln’s true legacy? For Richard Carwardine, the President’s belief that American values can transform the world remains an inspiration…

This article was first published in the February 2009 issue of BBC History Magazine
Abraham Lincoln’s rise from rural poverty to the presidency of the United StatesAbraham Lincoln’s rise from rural poverty to the presidency of the United States is an embodiment of the American Dream. (MP Rice, Washington DC/Library of Congress)

No automatic alt text available.by: Elinor Evans-Friday 20th January 2017

Political assassinations, however tragic, commonly gild their victims’ historical reputations. We cannot be sure what John F Kennedy would have achieved had he seen out his presidential term. Yet the bullet that killed him in Dallas in November 1963 prompted not just an outpouring of grief but a persisting sense of political greatness cruelly denied. When in April 1865 the actor John Wilkes Booth pulled the trigger to send Abraham Lincoln to a premature grave, he shot a president at his moment of greatest triumph, just days after the ending of the Civil War that had quashed rebellion and begun the final emancipation of the slaves. 

Iranian missile test stokes tensions with US and allies


US, Israel call for urgent UN Security Council meeting as French foreign minister vows to defend Iranian nuclear deal

Iran's president, Hassan Rouhani, during a visit to the United Nations in New York (Reuters)
Tuesday 31 January 2017
The United States has been accused of inflaming tensions after it called for an urgent meeting of the UN Security Council in response to an Iranian ballistic missile test.
The US requested the emergency meeting after the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations called for council action.
"In light of Iran's January 29 launch of a medium-range ballistic missile, the United States has requested urgent consultations of the Security Council," the US mission said in a statement.
We hope that Iran's defence programme is not used by the new US administration... as a pretext to create new tensions - Iran's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif

Iran carried out a test launch of a medium-range ballistic missile that exploded after flying 1,010km on Sunday according to a US official.
But before Security Council talks on Tuesday, Iran's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, warned the US against "creating new tensions" with Tehran over ballistic missile tests.
"We hope that Iran's defence programme is not used by the new US administration... as a pretext to create new tensions," Zarif said in a news conference with visiting French counterpart Jean-Marc Ayrault.
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Shoigu accused the US of "heating up the situation". 
"Such actions, if they took place, do not breach the resolution," he was reported as saying by the Interfax news agency.
But the EU warned Iran not to stoke mistrust.
"The EU reiterates its concern about Iran’s missile programme and calls upon Iran to refrain from activities which deepen mistrust, such as ballistic missile tests," an EU foreign affairs spokeswoman said.

Trump and Iran

Tehran agreed in 2015 to curb its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of sanctions.
A UN Security Council resolution adopted a few days after the agreement bars Iran from developing missiles "designed to carry nuclear warheads".
Iran says its missiles do not breach the resolutions due to their defensive nature, and the weapons are not designed to carry nuclear warheads.
But Bob Corker, the chairman of the US Senate's foreign relations committee, said on Monday that he would work with other politicians and the Trump administration to hold Iran accountable.
During the US election race, Donald Trump branded the Iranian nuclear deal as "the worst ever negotiated", and told voters he would rip it up or seek a better agreement.
On Sunday, Trump spoke by telephone to Saudi Arabia's king, Salman, a close ally in the Middle East. A White House statement said the two leaders agreed on the need to address "Iran's destabilising regional activities".
The US president also included Iran among seven countries whose citizens are barred from entry into the US for 90 days.
The move sparked protests across the US and across the world as travellers and visa holders from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya, Sudan and Somalia were barred entry.

France to 'defend' nuclear deal

News of the latest test came as the French foreign minister, Ayrault, arrived in Tehran on a two-day trip.
He promised on Monday to defend Iran's nuclear deal, but said it was imperative Tehran abide strictly by its conditions.
Ayrault said it was in the "common interest" that the 2015 accord was obeyed.
He said that while Iran had "largely" honoured the deal's terms, it had tested the spirit of the accord over the past year by carrying out several ballistic missile tests.
"France has expressed its concern at Iran's continuation of its ballistic missile tests on several occasions," he added.

Israeli pressure

The international community must not bury its head in the sand in the face of this Iranian aggression - Israeli ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon

Israel's ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, said the Iranian missile test violated UN resolutions on ballistic missiles that could have a nuclear capability. 
"The international community must not bury its head in the sand in the face of this Iranian aggression," said Danon. 
"The Security Council members must act immediately in response to these Iranian actions which endanger not only Israel, but the entire Middle East."
It was the first request for council consultations made by the US since new ambassador Nikki Haley took office.
Trump is due to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 15 February.

Democrats boycotted a hearing of the Senate Finance Committee in which Steven Mnuchin, President Trump's nominee for Treasury secretary, and Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), President Trump's nominee for health and human services secretary, would have likely been approved for consideration by the full Senate, on Jan. 31 at the Capitol. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)

 

Democrats intensified their opposition to President Trump on Tuesday by further delaying the confirmation of several of his Cabinet nominees amid strong Republican objections.

Hours after Trump fired acting attorney general Sally Yates for refusing to defend his executive order banning certain travelers and refugees, Democrats blocked a committee from approving the president’s choice for attorney general. Amid concerns with information provided by his picks to lead the departments of Health and Human Services and Treasury, Democrats did not show up at another Senate committee at all.

The theatrics drew more attention to Trump’s recent decisions and the growing bipartisan concern with his executive order Friday to implement a travel ban with virtually no consultation of top government officials or senior lawmakers.

But it also allowed Republicans to attack Democrats for holding up the formation of Trump’s government. Ultimately, Democrats alone lack the votes needed to block any of Trump’s nominees from eventually taking office — and there are no signs of Republican opposition to any of his picks.

During a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Democrats criticized Trump for firing Yates and said that they would not support his nominee for attorney general, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), because they do not believe he would ever stand up to Trump in a similar fashion. They also planned to invoke an arcane rule to block the committee from holding a roll-call vote on Sessions’s nomination on Tuesday. Republicans said they would reconvene on Wednesday.

During Sally Yates's 2015 confirmation hearing for deputy attorney general, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) questioned whether Yates was prepared to "say no" to the president if necessary. Yates was fired by President Trump Jan. 30, after refusing to enforce his controversial travel ban executive order. (Monica Akhtar, Deirdra O'Regan/The Washington Post)

During Sally Yates's 2015 confirmation hearing for deputy attorney general, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) questioned whether Yates was prepared to "say no" to the president if necessary. Yates was fired by President Trump Jan. 30, after refusing to enforce his controversial travel ban executive order. (Monica Akhtar, Deirdra O'Regan/The Washington Post)

Just down the hallway of the Dirksen Senate Office Building, the Senate Finance Committee met to vote on Steven T. Mnuchin’s nomination to serve as treasury secretary and Rep. Tom Price’s nomination to be secretary of health and human services — but Democrats boycotted the meeting, forcing Republicans to reschedule both votes.

Meanwhile, Democrats once again tried and failed to stall a vote to advance Trump’s pick for education secretary, Betsy DeVos, to the full Senate, but Republicans prevailed on a party-line vote.

Amid the rancor elsewhere, senators confirmed Elaine Chao to serve as Trump’s transportation secretary by a vote of 93 to 6. And the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee approved the nominations of former Texas governor Rick Perry to be energy secretary and Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.) to be interior secretary with bipartisan majorities, sending them to the full Senate for final up-or-down votes.

Developments in the Judiciary and Finance committees, however, signaled how defiant Democrats remain in stalling Trump’s nominees.

When the meeting began, Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) sat alone at the dais with just three other Republican senators. Having just come from the Judiciary hearing, Hatch told his colleagues, “Jeff Sessions isn’t treated much better than these fellas are.”

“Some of this is just because they don’t like the president,” Hatch said, later adding that Democrats “ought to stop posturing and acting like idiots.”



Sen. Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.) agreed. “I think this is unconscionable,” he said.

“We did not inflict this kind of obstructionism on President Obama,” added Sen. Patrick J. Toomey (R-Pa.), the only other senator in the room. He added that the Democrats were committing “a completely unprecedented level of obstruction. This is not what the American people expect of the United States Senate.”

But just four years ago, Republicans similarly boycotted a Senate committee’s vote on Gina McCarthy to serve as President Barack Obama’s interior secretary. Senators said at the time that she had refused to answer their questions about transparency in the agency.

Other walkouts have happened, most famously in 2003, when Rep. Bill Thomas (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, dispatched U.S. Capitol Police officers to find Democrats who left a hearing where Republicans were trying to pass a pension bill. He later apologized for his heavy-handed tactics on the House floor.

Shortly before the Finance hearing began, committee Democrats huddled in the office of the panel’s ranking member, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), and agreed that they would all boycott the session, aides said.

The boycott was prompted by Democrats’ concerns that Mnuchin initially misstated his personal wealth on financial disclosure forms and misstated how OneWest Bank, a bank he led as chairman and chief executive officer, scrutinized mortgage documents. Democrats have also raised questions about Price and his personal financial investments in health-care companies and legislation he promoted that could have benefited several of the same companies. Some of the stock trades, as well as campaign donations from companies, closely coincided with one another.

A series of stock buys the lawmaker made in an Australian company, Innate Immunotherapeutics, has brought scrutiny for weeks. In 2016, he received a discounted price for his purchases as part of a private offering made to only a certain number of investors; the questions have been whether he received certain insider information from Rep. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.), a company board member and its largest investor, and whether he got a special price when he bought $50,000 to $100,000 in shares last year.

The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Price received a “privileged” offer that he had mischaracterized in the hearings when he said such offers “were available to every single individual that was an investor at the time.”

Standing outside his office as the markup was to begin, Wyden told reporters that Price’s statements contradicted those by Wilkinson and other company officials.
“At a minimum,” Wyden said, “I believe the committee should postpone this vote and talk to company officials.”

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) said he was conferring with party colleagues until late Monday night about how to proceed, and they ultimately decided to boycott.

“In some ways, we’re doing President Trump a favor,” Brown said. “If these nominees had been confirmed, and then these stories broke about how they lied, how they made money on foreclosures, how they made money off of sketchy health-care stock trades, this would have been a major scandal for the administration. Now it’s just a problem we can fix.”

Much of the drama of Tuesday morning unfolded along a fluorescent-lit hallway on the second floor of the Dirksen Senate Office Building. Wyden and Brown announced their plans to forego the finance panel’s vote to a pack of reporters situated near Wyden’s office and the committee room where angry Republicans fumed. A few steps away was the Judiciary Committee room, where Sessions’s future was being debated and where at least pair of protesters were removed.

Shuttling between the two committees, Hatch told reporters he had no idea Democrats had planned to protest his hearing.

“That’s one of the most pathetic things I’ve seen in my whole time in the Senate,” he said.

Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), added that the Democratic boycott of Price would make it difficult for Republicans to enact crucial elements of their agenda like revamping the Affordable Care Act.
“It gets a lot harder; we need him there,” Thune said.

In the Judiciary hearing, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and other Democrats strongly defended Yates against Trump’s claim that she had betrayed the Justice Department.

Yates’s defiance of Trump “took guts,” Feinstein said. “That statement said what an independent attorney general should do. That statement took a steel spine to have the courage to say no.”

“I have no confidence that Sen. Sessions will do that,” she added. “Instead, he has been the fiercest, most dedicated and most loyal promoter in Congress of the Trump agenda.”

Republicans defended Sessions, but said little about Trump’s executive order. Democrats planned to end hearing by using the obscure “two-hour” rule that permits either party to stop committees from meeting beyond the first two hours of the Senate’s official day. During the Obama administration, Republicans used the same rule against Democratic Cabinet nominees.

In the Senate, Health, Education Labor and Pensions Committee, Democrats tried postponing the vote on DeVos, complaining she had just submitted written responses to hundreds of questions on Monday night and plagiarized some answers.

The panel then toiled over the actual vote on DeVos’s nomination, with Democrats complaining that it shouldn’t count because Hatch — a member of the committee who was simultaneously dealing with events in the Judiciary and Finance meetings — was allowed to submit a proxy vote. Without him in the room, the 23-member committee would have deadlocked. After a recess and several minutes of heated argument, Republicans ordered a revote with Hatch in the room and approved DeVos along party lines, 12 to 11.

Amid growing public concern with Trump’s travel ban, Democrats have faced louder calls from within their party to boldly confront the new administration.

“This is the exact right type of tactic for this moment,” said Kurt Walters, the campaign director of the transparency group Demand Progress. “We’re seeing someone who came into office with a historic popular vote loss come in and push a radical, unconstitutional agenda. Yes, radical and bold tactics are what senators should be using in response.”

The Communications Workers of America labor union said in a statement that Senate Democrats “should keep it up. Americans deserve a government that will fight for them and the basic principles of integrity and honesty.”

But further delays could have far-reaching consequences, as became evident on Monday night when the Justice Department was plunged into turmoil by Trump’s decision to fire Yates, an Obama-era appointee, for refusing to defend his travel ban in federal court. In her place Trump installed Dana Boente, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, who is expected to hold the job until Sessions is confirmed as attorney general.

While senators toil over the qualifications and positions of Trump’s nominees, he has started meeting with world leaders, reshaping immigration and trade policy and tasked congressional Republicans with overhauling the nation’s health-care system — with most of the seats around the White House Cabinet Room still empty.

Schumer was unapologetic on Monday, telling the Spanish-language network Univision that “Senate Democrats, we’re the accountability.”

In a sign of the near-toxic level of tension between Democrats and Republicans, Schumer was one of the six Democrats to vote against confirming Chao, the wife of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), to lead the Transportation Department. Senate records show that no nominee for transportation secretary has earned so many “no” votes since at least Jimmy Carter’s administration.

Kelsey Snell, Kimberly Kindy and David Weigel contributed to this report.

FactCheck Q&A: Trump’s travel ban

Who killed the most in the US in 2016?

  •  30 JAN 2017

Who is affected?

Citizens of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen are barred from entering the United States for 90 days.

After a number of twists and turns over recent days, the very latest advice from the UK Foreign Office is that people with British passports will not be affected, if they are travelling with a US visa.

That includes Britons with dual citizenship of one of the seven countries, even if they are flying to the US from that country, the Foreign Office told us on Monday afternoon.

And people who have indefinite leave to remain in the UK and hold nationality of one of the seven countries are eligible to apply for US visas.

A small number of people with the special visas granted to diplomats and their families and people who work for the UN, Nato and foreign governments are also exempt, as per the executive order signed by President Trump on Saturday.

Syrian refugees are barred from the US indefinitely, while refugees from other countries will be prevented from entering for 120 days.

What if you have a green card?

White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus initially said those who hold green cards (people who were not born in the US but who are eligible to live and work there) would be affected by the temporary ban.

But just minutes later in a separate interview, he said “of course they were [exempt]”.

John Kelly, Homeland Security Secretary, issued a statement saying: “Lawful permanent resident status will be a dispositive factor in our case-by-case determinations.”

A White House official said on Sunday that more than 170 green card holders were allowed in on that day.

Is it a “Muslim ban”?

Not really. The executive order makes no mention of checking the religion of people attempting to enter the US.

But all seven countries are Muslim-majority, and Trump repeatedly expressed the desire specifically to halt Muslim immigration while on the presidential campaign trail.

In December 2015 he announced: “Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.”

Now the President seems unhappy that the US media are referring to this policy as a “Muslim ban”, although it’s not clear how often this phrase has been used in reporting.

The New York Times used the words in an editorial piece. Some other news organisations have used the phrase in inverted commas, and others have referred to “predominantly Muslim” or “mostly Muslim” countries.

Trump advisor and lawyer Rudy Giuliani told Fox News the President had used the phrase “Muslim ban” and approached Giuliani on advice on how to enact it.

Giuliani said: “When [Trump] first announced it he said: ‘Muslim ban’. He called me up. He said: ‘Put a commission together. Show me the right way to do it legally.’

While Trump’s executive order doesn’t single out Muslims, it does say that when the refugee programme resumes, priority should be given to claims “made by individuals on the basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual’s country of nationality”.

30_trump_tweet
This suggests that Iraqi Christians might end up getting priority over Iraqi Muslim refugees, and recent tweets from Trump suggests he has the plight of Middle Eastern Christians on his mind.

Things don’t look too hopeful for Syrian Christians though, as all refugees from that country are barred from entering America until further notice.

CNN reported the case of one Syrian Christian family who flew back to Qatar after apparently being turned back at Philadelphia.

Why these countries?

The Obama administration had already placed some restrictions on certain travellers who had visited these seven countries, based on an increased risk from “foreign terrorist fighters”.

In most of the countries, there is an active ongoing conflict involving at least one major terrorist organisation. The US State Departmentdesignates Iran, Sudan and Syria as state sponsors of terrorism.

Some critics have questioned why other countries with a stronger historical connection to terror attacks on US targets have not been included.

Of the 19 men who killed around 3,000 people in the September 11, 2001, terror attacks, 15 were from Saudi Arabia and the others from the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Lebanon.

Some commentators have pointed out that the Trump Organization has business interest in Saudi Arabia and other Muslim-majority countries.

White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said on Sunday that Trump’s business activities did not influence the list of countries and more countries might be added to the list in subsequent executive orders.

According to a new report from Duke University, 23 per cent of Muslim Americans involved with violent extremist plots since 9/11 had family backgrounds in these seven countries. But none of them carried out attacks that caused fatalities.

Indeed, according to New America’s terror database, every one of the 12 terrorists who has killed anyone in the United States since 9/11 has been a US citizen or legal resident.

None of them emigrated from, or came from a family that emigrated from, one of the seven countries on the Trump list.

Is Islamic terrorism a major threat?

This point is arguable, but there are statistics available that enable us to get some measure of the danger posed by Islamic extremism in the US, in the context of other threats.

The Duke study finds that 123 people have been killed by Muslim American extremists since the September 11 attacks, 54 of them in 2016.

Last year 188 people were killed in mass shootings in America carried out by non-Muslims. The total death toll for gun crime in 2016 was around 15,000 people.

How will the ban play with voters?

It’s too early to say. Opinion polls carried out before the new travel restrictions were put in place suggest a majority of Americans backed the idea of immigration restrictions on terror-prone regions, but most were unhappy about singling out Muslims.

We don’t know if the events of recent days will have changed people’s opinions.

(UPDATE: Rasmussen Polls has this survey of 1,000 likely voters, carried out on January 25 and 26, which shows 57 per cent supported the temporary ban, 33 per cent opposed and 10 per cent were undivided.)

What do US politicians say?

At time of writing, some 60 senators are known to oppose the restrictions (46 Democrats and 12 republicans) and just four (all Republicans) support it, while 37 have remained silent on the issue (36 Republicans and one Democrat).

Only one governor has publicly supported President Trump’s order – Alabama’s Robert Bentley, a Republican – while 15 say they are opposed (5 Republicans, 10 Democrats) and 35 remain silent (27 Republicans, 7 Democrats, 1 independent).

Fight or flight: Should State Department employees undermine Trump, or just quit?

Fight or flight: Should State Department employees undermine Trump, or just quit?

No automatic alt text available.BY THOMAS E. RICKS-JANUARY 31, 2017

By Sharon Burke
Best Defense guru

“They should either get with the program or they can go,” President Donald Trump’s spokesman, Sean Spicer, said about career State Department officials who have allegedly submitted a dissent memo about the Jan. 27 executive order on immigration.

This comment followed last week’s abrupt dismissal of several high level career officials, including the one who would ultimately be responsible for implementing parts of the new policy.

This is not the first time the loyalty of career diplomats has been questioned, of course, nor is it uncommon for career officials in presidential appointments to be swapped out. But if the reports about the “dissent channel” memo are accurate, it would be an unprecedented protest so early in a new administration.

Is it possible that Trump is right in suspecting that career diplomats are not “with the program”? Will they try to obstruct his agenda?

I recently posed that question to current and retired Foreign Service officers, who ranged from just a few years of service to one of the most storied ambassadors in the history of the country. The answer was a firm no — and maybe a dash of yes. It’s complicated.

First of all, it’s probably true that there aren’t a ton of Trump voters at the State Department, but that’s not necessarily because they love the Democratic party. All the diplomats I spoke to were adamant that personal political views are irrelevant when it comes to doing the country’s business. Some actually preferred Republican bosses, who they said were more likely to be good managers.

There’s some optimism about Rex Tillerson, Trump’s pick for secretary of state, on that score, though there’s no telling if he’ll have a say in major policy decisions, such as the immigration ban.

From my own experience as both a civil servant and political appointee in Republican and Democratic administrations, military members, diplomats, and civil servants are very professional and truly do take the oath of office seriously. And therein lies one big problem.

That oath is to the Constitution, not the individual sitting in the Oval Office. Career diplomats will undoubtedly give the new president their best advice, but what if it’s not what he wants to hear? With a president who has talked openly about undoing decades of American diplomacy on everything from NATO to the nuclear balance in Asia, that seems very likely.

Given what we’ve seen so far from Trump, he may openly disdain advice he doesn’t agree with — or just ignore it altogether. The serving diplomats I spoke to said that Trump has basically not asked for much input to date. This mystifies and alarms them.

“Not every exchange with a foreign leader is a knife fight,” one former ambassador observed, “but you always want to make sure your guy has a knife.” And from their point of view, Trump is going into these conversations unarmed — or worse, his posse sometimes includes family members.
“We look like a tinpot dictatorship,” one senior diplomat lamented. “We rail against this in other countries.”

Still, it’s highly unlikely that career diplomats will refuse to carry out a lawful order from the president, even it’s not what they would recommend. In 2002, for example, Ambassador Ryan Crocker famously told President George W. Bush that invading Iraq was a bad idea, prompting questions about his loyalty. Just a few years later, he was the same president’s point person in Baghdad, delivering “the surge” with General David Petraeus.

On the other hand, that does not mean career diplomats and civil servants will rush to implement policies they don’t agree with. That can take the form of a dissent memo, but more often the bureaucracy just discreetly slows down or sinks bad ideas (and good ideas sometimes, for that matter). Call it “affable noncompliance.” Political appointees may not even realize it’s happening.

Still, that’s usually restricted to relatively small policies, rather than major decisions such as a trade war with Mexico or a shooting war in the South China Sea.

In fact, there’s a bigger danger when it comes to Trump-era diplomacy, which is that the most experienced and talented people at the State Department will just leave. All of the sitting, senior officials I spoke to expressed discomfort with serving as the representative of Trump, more because of his personal conduct than his political views. Though the dividing line between the personal and political may be a bit fuzzy: One junior Foreign Service officer, for example, had concerns for his safety, pointing out that diplomats rely on foreign nationals (including Muslims and Mexicans) to provide security and other services in U.S. embassies around the world.

If anything, Trump’s policies to date are going to require great diplomatic skill to carry out, which puts Spicer’s cavalier attitude in an ironic light. Still, many experienced diplomats may well stay, both because they believe in the commitment they made to the country and because of the lure of efficacy.

“Trust me when I tell you,” one senior Foreign Service officer stressed, “you have far more impact on the inside than on the outside.”

Sharon E. Burke is a senior advisor at New America. She served at the State Department in the George W. Bush administration from 2002 to 2005 and at the Pentagon in the Barack Obama administration from 2010 to 2014.

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

Indian IT sector warns against U.S. visa bill

Workers are seen at their workstations on the floor of an outsourcing centre in Bangalore, February 29, 2012. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash/Files--Employees of Indian software company Infosys walk past Infosys logos at their campus in the Electronic City area in Bangalore in this September 4, 2012 file photo. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash/File Photo
An employee speaks on a mobile phone as she eats her lunch at the cafeteria in the Infosys campus in Bengaluru, India, September 23, 2014. REUTERS/Abhishek N. Chinnappa/File Photo---Employees work at the Indian headquarters of iGate in the southern Indian city of Bangalore February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer/Files

By Sankalp Phartiyal and Tanvi Mehta | MUMBAI/BENGALURU-Tue Jan 31, 2017

India's IT lobby warned on Tuesday that a bill before the U.S. Congress aimed at imposing tougher visa rules unfairly targets some of its members and will not solve a U.S. labour shortage in technology and engineering.

Industry lobby group Nasscom was responding to a bill introduced by Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, a Democrat from California, that would double the minimum salary required for holders of H-1B visas to $130,000 and determine how many of the visas were allocated, based on factors such as overall wages.
India's $150 billion information technology sector, led by Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys Ltd and Wipro Ltd, uses the H-1B visas to fly engineers and developers to service clients in the U.S., their biggest market, but opponents say they are using the visas to replace U.S. workers.

Concerns about President Donald Trump's immigration policies were heightened by his ban on refugees on Friday.

"The Lofgren Bill contains provisions that may prove challenging for the Indian IT sector and will also leave loopholes that will nullify the objective of saving American jobs," Nasscom said.

The industry body said the bill did not address the shortage of skilled STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) workers in the U.S., adding that its provisions were "biased against H-1B dependent companies".

The chief executive of Tech Mahindra, the country's fourth-biggest software services exporter, said the Indian IT sector was already looking for alternatives.

"We will have to wait and watch for any impact felt on us after a few quarters," C.P. Gurnani said in a statement.

"Indian IT is already creating jobs and have been investing in form of setting up delivery centers and local hiring."

India's Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement on Tuesday it had expressed its concerns to the U.S. government, without providing further details.

"India's interests and concerns have been conveyed both to the U.S. Administration and the U.S. Congress at senior levels," Vikas Swarup, a spokesman for the ministry, said.

Shares in India's IT firms have tumbled in recent days on worries about the impact of the bill. The Nifty IT index fell 3.2 percent on Tuesday after earlier hitting its lowest since Nov. 24.

Analysts have said the bill would push India's software services exporters to ramp up automation, reducing the need for workers, although IT firms would still need to hire more workers in the U.S., including university graduates, increasing costs.

"All companies will have to bear higher expenditure if this bill gets passed, and the impact can be quite severe," Dipen Shah, senior vice president of the Private Client Group Research, Kotak Securities, said.
"There will be a severe hit (to) profitability."

TCS, Infosys and Wipro declined comment, while smaller rival HCL Tech did not respond to requests for comment.

(Writing by Rafael Nam; Editing by Alexander Smith)

Russian cybersecurity experts suspected of treason linked to CIA

Sergei Mikhailov and Dmitry Dokuchayev accused of betraying oaths and working with US intelligence agency, report says
The FSB headquarters (centre) in Moscow. Sergei Mikhailov was deputy head of the agency’s Centre for Information Security. Photograph: AP

 in Moscow-Tuesday 31 January 2017
Two of Moscow’s top cybersecurity officials are facing treason charges for cooperating with the CIA, according to a Russian news report.
The accusations add further intrigue to a mysterious scandal that has had the Moscow rumour mill working in overdrive for the past week, and come not long after US intelligence accused Russia of interfering in the US election and hacking the Democratic party’s servers.
Sergei Mikhailov was deputy head of the FSB security agency’s Centre for Information Security. His arrest was reported in a series of leaks over the past week, along with that of his deputy and several civilians, but Tuesday’s news went much further.
“Sergei Mikhailov and his deputy, Dmitry Dokuchayev, are accused of betraying their oath and working with the CIA,” Interfax said, quoting a source familiar with the investigation.
It is unlikely the news agency would have published the story without official sanction, though this does not necessarily mean the information is true.
The story did not make it clear whether the pair were accused of being CIA agents or merely passing on information through intermediaries.
According to earlier reports in the Russian media, Mikhailov was arrested some time ago, in theatrical fashion, during a plenary session of the top FSB leadership: a bag was placed over his head and he was marched out of the room, accused of treason.
His deputy, Dokuchayev, is believed to be a well-known Russian hacker who went by the nickname Forb, and began working for the FSB some years ago to evade jail for his hacking activities.
Together with the two FSB officers, Ruslan Stoyanov, the head of the computer incidents investigations unit at cybersecurity firm Kaspersky Lab, was also arrested several weeks ago.
Kaspersky confirmed last week that Stoyanov had been arrested and was being held in a Moscow prison, though it said the arrest was not linked to his work for the company. Interfax said four people had been arrested and a further eight were potential witnesses in the case.
It is believed that Dokuchayev and Mikhailov face treason charges, which carry a penalty of up to 20 years in prison. The treason charge means any trial will be held in secret.
The arrests and the treason charge, so soon after US intelligence accused Russia of interfering in the US election process and hacking the Democratic party servers, have led to inevitable questions about whether the arrests are linked to the US election story.
Over the weekend the New York Times cited one former and one current US official as saying human intelligence had played a major role in helping US authorities determine that Russia was behind the hacking. The publicly released version of the official report was largely free of real evidence to back up its conclusions, though if Russian sources were involved, it is understandable this would not be made public.
While the information on the arrests has come in difficult-to-decipher chunks, it has been clear that something very strange has been going on inside the FSB. In a city where leaks on such sensitive cases are rare, several Russian outlets have been furnished with varying versions of the story by insider sources, suggesting either a carefully calibrated attempt to get information out, or factions struggling to spin the story in various ways.
The majority of leaks suggest the arrests are linked to Shaltai-Boltai, a group of hackers who had become notorious for leaking the emails of Kremlin officials online. A former journalist, Vladimir Anikeev, believed to be the ringleader of the group, is also among those arrested, according to reports. 
In summer 2014 a representative of Shaltai-Boltai met the Guardian in a city outside Russia, on the understanding that neither the location nor the appearance of the man would be described in print.
The interview was set at a little-used boat club on the outskirts of a European capital. The man, who wore a floral shirt, sailed a boat into the middle of the river and spoke only when he had turned on loud music in the cabin to prevent anyone from listening in. 
The man, who introduced himself only as Shaltai, said the group was made up of hackers, and possibly disgruntled officials, and had a large archive of unused material it may choose to release in future. He claimed the group possessed everything ranging from records of every meal Vladimir Putin had eaten for the past several years to thousands of emails sent by the president’s inner circle.
As evidence, he produced a laptop and opened what looked at first glance like the full email archive for a leading Kremlin official. He suggested the group would be willing to provide information to clients who could pay.
The alleged role of Mikhailov in the Shaltai-Boltai scheme is murky. Another intelligence source described the alleged scheme to Interfax as follows: “Each of those involved did their own work. Some people developed and carried out cyberattacks, while others worked with foreign intelligence. These things went in parallel, but did not really overlap.”
Some believe Shaltai-Boltai could have been involved in passing information to western intelligence, while others suggest the appearance of the group in the case is a red herring to distract attention from the real election-hacking story.
“To me, these leaks about Shaltai-Boltai suggest a hastily made cover-up,” said Andrei Soldatov, co-author of a recent book on the Russian internet and cybersecurity. “Mikhailov and Stoyanov were real experts in one thing, the Russian digital underground, not the kind of stuff that Shaltai-Boltai leaked. So if there is anything real about the treason charges, the kind of information they could pass on would be about this, perhaps about informal actors in the DNC hacking scheme.”
On Tuesday, Life, an online news portal with close links to the security services, reported that FSB agents had searched Mikhailov’s home and dacha and found more than $12m (£10m) in cash stashed in various hiding places.

Bangladesh: Next general election and the search committee

by Swadesh Roy-
( February 1, 2017, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) The honourable President of Bangladesh has formed a search committee to select the next election commissioners of Bangladesh. According to the constitution of Bangladesh, the President has absolute power to appoint the election commissioners. But, five years back, the former President of Bangladesh and the nation’s most senior politician of the then time, Mr. Zillur Rahman, set up a new avenue of democracy in Bangladesh. Even though, he had the absolute constitutional power, he did not use it; rather he talked with all major political parties of Bangladesh and took their opinion to form a new election commission. It is to be said that, he established a good election commission. The present Chief Election Commissioner, Mr. Rakibuddin, who is about to retire in mid-February, is a man of highly common sense. Some critics may say that, in his period, the general election held in Bangladesh was not inclusive. It is true that the election held in 2014 was not inclusive but it was not the fault of the election commission and its total responsibilities went to the political parties, basically the oppositions, who not only boycotted the election but also tried to postpone the election by terrorist activities. They killed more than two hundred people including women and children, even the pregnant woman with her caring baby; and destroyed public wealth estimated at least several millions of US dollars.
However, in these circumstances, the Chief Election Commissioner, Mr. Rakbibuddin did not say a word with the press which was little harmful for the dignity of the election commission. Besides, when he got chance, all political parties helped him and his commission conducted a good election. Recently his commission has conducted a crucial city corporation election in one of the river port cites named ‘Narayangang’, near Dhaka. There were many bad rumors before the election but nothing happened during the election; and the country witnessed a free, fair and inclusive election. So, Narayangang city corporation election proved that only election commission is not the factor for conducting a good election in Bangladesh; rather there are many other components like good understanding among the political parties, awareness of people and other logistics support from the administration.
However, the present search committee has started their work by sharing views with some intellectuals. Their nature of working shows that they will talk with more stakeholders, list some names to the President as a proposal so that he can choose the Chief and other election commissioners from that list. In my opinion, the search committee has made a mistake in the meantime. They declared that they would invite a list of proposed names from all political parties. It will create a misunderstanding and some people in the society will be branded as several political parties’ identities which is not the reality. To illustrate, if the biggest party, Awami League proposes ten names, Bangladesh National Party (BNP) will do the same. And, all members from two lists will be branded with a political identity according to the list. So it will create many obstacles to find out the acceptable person to all parties. That is why, search committee can avoid it; otherwise most of the efficient persons will face controversy. Not only that, if they select people by themselves, which is their duty, will face controversy as well; because when any political party will see that the members of the election commission is out of their list, they will think that committee was bias to others.
Therefore, the search committee should sit several times with the President; because the President of Bangladesh is a renowned season politician. On the other hand, the election commission is very much sophisticated political organ of the state. All members of the search committee are highly knowledgeable and man of dignity; but they are not that much politically literate as the president of Bangladesh. So they should talk with the president in every step that Bangladesh can set up a smart and efficient election commission which will be helpful for forwarding democracy of Bangladesh, through the next election.
Swadesh Roy, Executive Editor, The Daily Janakantha, Dhaka, Bangladesh he can be reached swadeshroy@gmail.com