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

Monday, March 20, 2017

China’s Fear of U.S. Missile Defense Is Disingenuous

China’s Fear of U.S. Missile Defense Is Disingenuous

No automatic alt text available.BY ABRAHAM M. DENMARK-MARCH 20, 2017

A key responsibility of mine during my time in the Pentagon was to devise and implement U.S. defense policies and strategies related to North Korea. One unfortunate aspect of this responsibility was the repeated need to quickly develop options, in collaboration with my colleagues, to respond to North Korean ballistic missile tests. I got a lot of practice: In 2016 alone, Pyongyang conducted more than 20 such tests, despite multiple U.N. Security Council resolutions prohibiting Pyongyang from carrying them out.

Just a few hours after North Korea’s most recent test sent three ballistic missile into the Sea of Japan, the first elements of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) ballistic missile defense system began to arrive in South Korea. In many ways, North Korea provided a stark reminder of why the United States and the South Korea decided to deploy THAAD: The irrefutable ballistic missile threat that North Korea poses to U.S. allies and military forces in East Asia requires a reasonable defensive adjustment to America’s regional force posture. North Korea continues to violate multiple international sanctions, its actions threaten to destabilize the entire Asia-Pacific, and South Korea and the United States have the clear right to defend themselves from such a threat.

Nevertheless, China has been consistently and vociferously against the deployment of THAAD. Beijing has expressed most of its displeasure against South Korea through a robust campaign designed to maximize pressure on Seoul to reconsider its decision. China suspended several military channels with South Korea, and sought to punish South Korea economically with a series of actions that included sanctions against several South Korean companies. Beijing’s ire has even extended to the cultural realm — South Korean TV shows and K-pop music videos, which are wildly popular among China’s youth, have been blocked from streaming in China.

Most recently, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said that South Korea was making a mistake in deploying THAAD to the Korean peninsula and urged Seoul to reverse course. He also said that the THAAD system undermined China’s security, and, in what may be construed as a veiled threat, said that the deployment could make South Korea less secure.

China’s pressure on South Korea has been ineffective so far, and Seoul remains committed to deploying the missile defense system. Acceptance of THAAD even extends to South Korea’s liberal opposition, which has traditionally looked askance at U.S. military deployments to the peninsula. Leading liberal presidential candidate Moon Jae-in has even stated that the THAAD deployment would go forward under his administration. South Korea’s general acceptance of THAAD (though some opposition certainly remains) speaks to the tremendous threat the country faces from North Korea, as well as the continued strength of the U.S.-South Korea alliance — neither of which China has been adept at addressing.
Why China opposes THAAD

Chinese officials claim that the radar system associated with THAAD, known as the Army/Navy Transportable Radar Surveillance (AN/TPY-2), would give the United States a greater ability to see (and therefore defend against) potential Chinese ballistic missile launches against the American homeland. According to Beijing, this radar would serve to undermine China’s strategic deterrent and plunge the U.S-China strategic relationship into instability.

In reality, however, these fears are baseless. THAAD in the Korean Peninsula will be able to conduct only one mission: defend South Korea against a ballistic missile attack from North Korea. The only way that THAAD in the Korean Peninsula could defend against Chinese missiles would be if China decided to strike South Korea — a highly unlikely scenario.

Moreover, deploying an AN/TPY-2 radar in South Korea would not substantially enhance the ability of the United States to “see” Chinese ballistic missiles. The United States has already installed the same radar three times in East Asia — once in Guam and twice in Japan.

It should be noted that officials from China’s Foreign Ministry or political leadership have usually voiced the vast majority of Chinese objections to THAAD. The few times professional Chinese military officials have commented on THAAD, most discuss how ineffective THAAD in South Korea would be in a conflict between China and the United States. Song Zhongping, a military expert who served in China’s Second Artillery Corps (now called the Rocket Force), said that in a conflict the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) could use directed-energy weapons or electronic interference against THAAD’s radar. Similarly, Peng Guangqian, a military strategist at the PLA’s Academy of Military Sciences, added, “In peacetime, China also has measures to counter the THAAD system, for instance, making it ‘blind,’ which is very easy. The PLA is entirely capable of doing that.”

Finally, the disingenuousness of China’s claimed fear of THAAD’s radar is demonstrated by China’s actions since the decision to deploy THAAD to South Korea. After announcing the decision, the United States sought to allay China’s concerns by repeatedly offering to brief Beijing about the technical capabilities of THAAD’s radar. China refused these briefings. If Beijing were genuinely concerned about this radar, it would stand to reason that it would want to know as much about it as possible. Repeatedly refusing briefings on the subject strongly suggests that Beijing knows about the radar and what it does, and especially what it does not do. Indeed, when the United States initially offered to brief China about THAAD in 2016, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying admitted that THAAD was “certainly not a simple technology issue” for China.

I agree. China’s strong opposition to deploying THAAD to the Korean Peninsula is not technical, but geopolitical.

China’s broader strategic objective is to gradually establish itself as the dominant power in the Asia-Pacific that has the ability to drive all major decisions of consequence in the region. A critical aspect of this strategy is to circumscribe the ability of the United States to drive regional dynamics, especially in the military realm. This is especially true on the Korean Peninsula, which represents a close American alliance in very close proximity to China’s borders.

Through this lens, THAAD would be perceived not as a tactical military deployment designed to respond to a real military threat, but rather as a symbol of America’s continued strength in China’s backyard. This is why China has pushed South Korea so strongly over a military deployment that does not significantly affect China in any way. For Beijing, THAAD represents a persistent rebuke to China’s broader strategic ambitions for regional dominance.

Implications for the future

China’s strategists should know that their argument is not likely to succeed. It essentially calls on South Korea to publicly break with its American ally, which has consistently and reliably defended South Korea since the North Korean invasion in 1950, in favor of China — while offering no solutions other than sanctions, anger, and hubris. Moreover, China’s position boils down to requesting that the United States and South Korea prioritize China’s baseless security concerns about THAAD over the very real threat they face.

This dynamic does not bode well for the ability of China and the United States to work together on North Korea. If China’s leaders continue to view this dynamic in starkly zero-sum terms, and believe that any enhancement to U.S. military posture in the region is necessarily to China’s disadvantage, Washington’s ability to cooperate with Beijing will be severely limited. Moreover, China’s ability to convince South Korea to align itself with China’s interests will have to take South Korea’s own interests into account, which will immediately run counter to China’s long-standing (if grudging) support for North Korea.
Of course, cooperating to diminish the threat posed by North Korea is the best and perhaps only way to defuse this crisis. The basis for that cooperation should be obvious — neither side wants to see North Korea develop a credible nuclear capability, nor do they want to see war on the Korean Peninsula. Nonetheless, China’s insistence on seeing the United States as fundamentally hostile to China’s interests will likely prevent either side from cooperating in any meaningful way.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson addressed THAAD during a joint press conference with South Korean Foreign Minister Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se during his recent visit to the regionTillerson expressed the continued commitment of the United States to deploy THAAD, even in light of the ongoing president election in South Korea. “It’s my expectation that the new government in South Korea will continue to be supportive of the THAAD system,” said Tillerson, “because it is directed solely at the defense of [South Korea].” Tillerson also criticized China for its economic retaliation against South Korea as “inappropriate and troubling.”

 These are good statements to make publicly, but they are by themselves insufficient. President Trump reportedly plans to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in April, and this be a critical opportunity to send a clear, focused message to China about THAAD and the true, fundamental issue at play: North Korea. Xi should hear, in no uncertain terms, that the United States sees North Korea as a significant threat to its security and that of its allies, will not accept a nuclear North Korea, and will do what it must to defend its allies and itself.

The U.S. message on THAAD should support this broader position vis-à-vis North Korea, and can do so with three points. First, deploying THAAD to the Korean peninsula should be seen as a purely defensive response to the growing threat of North Korean ballistic missiles. Second, the United States should be clear that the problem is not THAAD — the fundamental problem is North Korea, its continued belligerence, and its ongoing pursuit of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.Washington and Seoul would not need THAAD if the threat of Pyongyang’s ballistic missiles were not so great. Third, the United States should be unequivocal in its commitment to work with its allies to ensure that its military posture is sufficient to defend them. This means that if North Korea continues on its course, THAAD may just be the beginning.

This issue is far from settled. While the actual deployment of THAAD to the Korean peninsula has already begun, it will take several months to be completed. In the meantime, Chinese President Xi Jinping is scheduled to meet with President Donald Trump in April, and South Korea is set to elect a new president on May 9. THAAD will certainly be a major issue influencing both events, and Tillerson will have a critical role to play in ensuring that THAAD remains on track in the turbulent weeks to come.

Photo credit: Trucks carrying components of the THAAD missile defense system at Osan Air Base in South Korea on March 6, 2017. U.S. Forces, Korea via Getty Images
In major arms seizure, Thai cops discover plot to kill prime minister


prayuth-940x580
Prayuth offers a traditional greeting as he arrives at a weekly Cabinet meeting at the Government House in Bangkok. Source: Reuters/Chaiwat Subprasom

20th March 2017

THAI police said on Sunday they had uncovered a plot to assassinate Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha after seizing a weapons cache belonging to a fugitive anti-junta activist.
It is the latest discovery of a weapons stockpile belonging to a member of the red shirt movement, a political group loyal to exiled prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra.


Police on Saturday found dozens of rifles, grenades and thousands of rounds of ammunition, at a house belonging to red shirt leader Wuthipong Kochathamakun, who has been on the run since the military coup.

Police also arrested nine men in connection with the arms seizure, saying they had clear evidence the suspects and their extended network were aiming to cause unrest.

“We found a rifle with a scope. We guarantee this is not to shoot at birds but was going to be used to assassinate the leader of the country,” national police chief Jakthip Chaijinda told reporters on Sunday.

Then-army chief Prayuth overthrew the government of Thaksin’s sister Yingluck in a 2014 coup. His junta discovered dozens of weapon caches belonging to groups they said were loyal to the Shinawatra clan.

The junta said the stockpiles showed there were groups trying to create instability and justified their seizure of power.


Jakthip presented no other evidence of an assassination plot, but said Wuthipong and his network had always opposed the junta and the group had predicted on social media the prime minister would be killed.

Police said the group was planning an ambush if officials had continued their operations against an influential nearby Buddhist temple, which is seen as having close ties to Thaksin.
Thai police ended their search of the Dhammakaya temple earlier this month after laying siege to it for more than three weeks without finding the former abbot, who is wanted for suspected money-laundering. – Reuters

India cabinet approves draft GST bills - minister

Truck drivers and helpers wait for their turn to submit their documents to get their loads cleared to cross a checkpoint at the Commercial Taxes Department check post at Walayar in Palakkad district in Kerala, September 5, 2015.  REUTERS/Sivaram V/Files
Truck drivers and helpers wait for their turn to submit their documents to get their loads cleared to cross a checkpoint at the Commercial Taxes Department check post at Walayar in Palakkad district in Kerala, September 5, 2015. REUTERS/Sivaram V/Files

Mon Mar 20, 2017

India's cabinet has approved four bills to implement a planned Goods and Services Tax (GST) bills, a government official said on Monday, paving the way for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to implement the landmark tax reform from July.

The four bills are likely to be taken up by the parliament this week, and a separate state GST bill in state assemblies later, the official also said, requesting anonymity ahead of a planned news briefing.

The GST Council, comprising federal and state finance ministers, has already cleared all five draft laws - the Central GST, Integrated GST, state GST, Union territory GST and rules on compensating states for revenue losses.

There would be four tax slabs of 5, 12, 18 and 28 percent, plus a levy on taxes on items like cars, aerated drinks and tobacco products to compensate states for any revenue losses in the first five years.

The new tax, biggest tax reform since India got independence in 1947 from the British colonial rule, is expected to boost the rate of economic growth by about 0.5 percentage points, broaden the revenue base and cut compliance cost for firms.

(Reporting by Nigam Prusty; Writing by Manoj Kumar; Editing by Douglas Busvine)
Can social media, loud and inclusive, fix world politics?

Protesters post a hashtag to social media together to make it trend as they denounce policies of President Donald Trump at the Not My President’s Day Rally in Los Angeles, California February 20, 2017. David McNew/Reuters---The movement #Blacklivesmatter has grown immensely on social media. The All-Nite Images/WikimediaCC BY-SA
Can new technologies increase government accountability? India was ranked 79th on 176 countries by Transparency International in 2016. Nirzardp/WikimediaCC BY--Social networks played a vital role in initiating Egypt’s 2011 uprising. Essam Sharaf/WikimediaCC BY-ND

The Conversation Global’s new series, Politics in the Age of Social Media, examines how governments around the world rely on digital tools to exercise power.

Chercheur associé à LaRIFA, Université Libanaise-March 19, 2017 6.40pm EDT
The ConversationPrivacy is no longer a social norm, said Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in 2010, as social media took a leap to bring more private information into the public domain.

But what does it mean for governments, citizens and the exercise of democracy? Donald Trump is clearly not the first leader to use his Twitter account as a way to both proclaim his policies and influence the political climate. Social media presents novel challenges to strategic policy, and has become a managerial issues for many governments.

But it also offers a free platform for public participation in government affairs. Many argue that the rise of social media technologies can give citizens and observers a better opportunity to identify pitfalls of government and their politics.

As government embrace the role of social media and the influence of negative or positive feedback on the success of their project, they are also using this tool to their advantages by spreading fabricated news.

This much freedom of expression and opinion can be a double-edged sword.

A tool that triggers change

On the positive side, social media include social networking applications such as Facebook and Google+, microblogging services such as Twitter, blogs, video blogs (vlogs), wikis, and media-sharing sites such as YouTube and Flickr, among others.

Social media as a collaborative and participatory tool, connects users with each other and help shaping various communities. Playing a key role in delivering public service value to citizens it also helps people to engage in politics and policy-making, making processes easier to understand, through information and communication technologies (ICTs).

Today four out of five countries in the world have social media features on their national portals to promote interactive networking and communication with the citizen. Although we don’t have any information about the effectiveness of such tools or whether they are used to their full potential, 20% of these countries shows that they have “resulted in new policy decisions, regulation or service”.

Social media can be an effective tool to trigger changes in government policies and services if well used. It can be used to prevent corruption, as it is direct method of reaching citizens. In developing countries, corruption is often linked to governmental services that lack automated processes or transparency in payments.

The UK is taking the lead on this issue. Its anti-corruption innovation hub aims to connect several stakeholders – including civil society, law enforcement and technologies experts – to engage their efforts toward a more transparent society.

With social media, governments can improve and change the way they communicate with their citizens – and even question government projects and policies. In Kazakhstan, for example, a migration-related legislative amendment entered into force early January 2017 and compelled property owners to register people residing in their homes immediately or else face a penalty charge starting in February 2017.

Citizens were unprepared for this requirement, and many responded with indignation on social media. At first the government ignored this reaction. However, as the growing anger soared via social media, the government took action and introduced a new service to facilitate the registration of temporary citizens.

Shaping political discourse

Increasing digital services have engaged and encourage public to become more socially responsible and politically involved. But many government are wary of the power that technology, and most specifically smart media, exert over how citizens’ political involvement.

Popular social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp are being censored by many governments. ChinaSouth Africa and others are passing laws to regulate the social media sphere.
 
Availability of Youtube.com as of May 2016. May be incomplete or incorrect due to lack of information.SurrogateSlav/WikimediaCC BY-NC
The dominance of social media allows citizens to have quick access to government information – information whose legitimacy may not be validated. As this happens, the organic image formed in their minds will be affected and changed and an induced image, whether negative or positive, will be formulated.

For example, the top trending topics on social media right now are related to a tweet from Wikileaks claiming that CIA can get into smart electronics – like iPhones and Samsung TVs – to spy on individuals. This series of revelations led Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to see his internet access cut off, allegedly by the government of Ecuador, in October 2016.
Julian Assange in 2014. David G Silvers- Cancillería del Ecuador/FlickrCC BY-SA
For his supporters, this step jeopardises what they perceive as the voice of truth. WikiLeaks usually spread mass of sensitive and reliable information into the public domain about politics, society and the economy.

Others state that confidential information should not be published in social media because it might endanger life and could be misinterpreted.

In 2011, social media played a crucial role in the direction of the Arab spring in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, enabling protesters in those countries to share information and disclose the atrocities committed by their own governments. This ignited a “domino effect” that led to mass revolts.

Governments reacted by trying to impose draconian restrictions on social media, from censorship to promoting fake new and propaganda against them.

The dissemination of uncensored information through social media has precipitated a wave of public shows of dissatisfaction, characterised by a mix of demands for better public services, changes in the institutions and instating a socially-legitimated state. Citizens use social media to meet up and interact with different groups, and some of those encounters lead to concrete actions.

Where’s the long-term fix?

But the campaigns that result do not always evolve into positive change.

Egypt and Libya are still facing several major crises over the last years, along with political instability and domestic terrorism. The social media influence that triggered the Arab Spring did not permit these political systems to turn from autocracy to democracy.

Brazil exemplifies a government’s failure to react properly to a massive social media outburst. In June 2013 people took to the streets to protest the rising fares of public transportation. Citizens channelled their anger and outrage through social media to mobilise networks and generate support.

The Brazilian government didn’t understand that “the message is the people”. Though the riots some called the “Tropical Spring” disappeared rather abruptly in the months to come, they had major and devastating impact on Brazil’s political power, culminating in the impeachment of President Rousseff in late 2016 and the worst recession in Brazil’s history.

As in the Arab Spring countries, the use of social media in Brazil did not result in economic improvement. The country has tumbled down into depression, and unemployment has risen to 12.6%.

Extremism, fake news and hate speech

Social media is also used to propagate “fake news” in order to destabilise an organisation or a country. The spread of disinformation through social media shows how governments can use the art of communication to channel specific facts to their own citizens – or to the world.

In 2014, Russia spread conspiracy theories and fake stories, both during the Crimea crisis and the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 , to hide its military involvement in Ukraine. More recently, the Kremlin (or its agents) manipulated social media to spread “fake news” and pro-Trump messages during the American presidential election. The objective of this digital disinformation campaign was to shake the American political system, rather than to change the results of the election.

Social media also provide a powerful platform for extremism and hate speech, citizen activities that should compel government action.

Social media may have been used for extreme purposes, to topple presidents, spread calumny, and meddle in internal affairs of foreign countries. But it remains a potent technological tool that governments can use to capture and understand the needs and preferences of their citizens, and to engage them, on their own terms from the very beginning of the process as agencies develop public services.

Government typically asks “how can we adapt social media to the way in which we do e-services, and then try to shape their policies accordingly. They would be wiser to ask, "how can social media enable us to do things differently in a way they’ve never been done before?” – that is, policy-making in collaboration with people.

US to ban some airline passengers from most electronics


US officials said no American carriers were affected by ban, which would apply to devices larger than cell phones

Jordanian Airlines said in a now-deleted tweet on Monday that US-bound passengers would be barred from carrying most electronic devices aboard aircraft starting Tuesday (AFP)


Monday 20 March 2017

India's cabinet has approved four bills to implement a planned Goods and Services Tax (GST) bills, a government official said on Monday, paving the way for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to implement the landmark tax reform from July.

The four bills are likely to be taken up by the parliament this week, and a separate state GST bill in state assemblies later, the official also said, requesting anonymity ahead of a planned news briefing.

The GST Council, comprising federal and state finance ministers, has already cleared all five draft laws - the Central GST, Integrated GST, state GST, Union territory GST and rules on compensating states for revenue losses.

There would be four tax slabs of 5, 12, 18 and 28 percent, plus a levy on taxes on items like cars, aerated drinks and tobacco products to compensate states for any revenue losses in the first five years.

The new tax, biggest tax reform since India got independence in 1947 from the British colonial rule, is expected to boost the rate of economic growth by about 0.5 percentage points, broaden the revenue base and cut compliance cost for firms.


(Reporting by Nigam Prusty; Writing by Manoj Kumar; Editing by Douglas Busvine)

Why Is the GOP So Excited About Pushing for a Law That Will Make Poor People Get Sicker and Die?

With the AHCA, the Republicans have put a price tag on the lives of America's working class: $300 billion.

Home
By D. Watkins / Salon-March 19, 2017
Trumpcare, Ryancare, Trashcare — whatever you want to call it, the American Health Care Act is nothing more than a cheap stab at Barack Obama, a petty attempt on the part of grudge-holding Republicans, including President Donald Trump, to try to diminish Obama’s legacy. They can try, but that will be impossible — Trump’s follow-up act has been so bad so far that he’s making George W. Bush look practically Lincoln-esque. But let’s set legacies and agendas aside for now and focus on health care.
“We have come up with a solution that’s really, really, I think, very good,” Donald Trump has said. “It’s an unbelievably complex subject. Nobody knew that health care could be so complicated.”
I’m not a president or a billionaire. I could never afford the kind of routine checkups that Trump has access to from award-winning physicians with platinum stethoscopes and solid gold scalpels — or even a state-of-the-art Viking fridge stocked with spare teenage hearts and kidneys, all plump and ready to be inserted when Trump’s conk out. He’ll probably live to be 360 years old as a result. Most of us don’t have that experience, and the president, just like the congresspeople and senators who are aimlessly playing with the lives of their constituents by threatening to kill Obamacare, is taken care of. They have amazing health care coverage that we, the taxpayers, fund. Strangely, that never makes it into the conversation.
Is Obamacare perfect? Absolutely not. But it has already saved the lives of millions of people. People who would have never voted for Obama are calling him a hero, even as some die-hard right-wingers praise the Affordable Care Act for saving their loved ones, not realizing that it’s the same as Obamacare.
Trump loves his catchphrase, “Make America great again.” Obviously he doesn’t understand that “great” is a process that we must constantly work toward. Greatness is edited, nurtured and achieved after recognizing what works and what doesn’t. Scrapping Obamacare and replacing it with a trash plan that will leave millions of people who were born without the luxury of being Trump-level rich uninsured is not making anything great. It’s evil. According to the CBO analysis, the AHCA would “reduce federal deficits by $337 billion over the coming decade and increase the number of people who are uninsured by 24 million in 2026 relative to current law.” And every Republican is running to the cable news networks, bragging about saving $300 billion. What does that mean to the person the Wall Street Journal described, a 62-year-old person who makes $18,000 a year who will now face premiums of up to $20,000?
Imagine a sickly elderly woman running home from work to her family to share with pride that the government just saved $300 billion. There is nothing more important than that to the government, even if it means that you’re broke, your granddaughter is pregnant because she couldn’t get birth control, and your grandson overdosed and died because he couldn’t be treated for his prescription drug addiction, which he developed to self-medicate his depression over the factory jobs that Trump promised never coming. We should all celebrate because the government saved $300 billion? That’s $300 billion that regular people will never touch.
People will not be treated for their illnesses. Many will suffer, and some will die. But at least the GOP beat Obama!
D. Watkins is the author of The Beast Side: Living and Dying While Black in America. He has been published in Salon, New York Times, the Guardian and other publications, and he is a frequent contributor to NPR and CNN. 

Spider venom may offer stroke therapy


Funnel web spider being milkedSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYImage caption-Funnel web spiders are milked using a pipette that sucks up their venom
BBC
20 March 2017
A protein in spider venom may help protect the brain from injury after a stroke, according to research.
Scientists found a single dose of the protein Hi1a worked on lab rats.
They said it showed "great promise as a future stroke treatment" but had not yet been tested in human trials.
The Stroke Association said the research was at its early stages but it would "welcome any treatment that has the potential to reduce the damage caused by stroke".
The researchers, from the University of Queensland and Monash University, travelled to Fraser Island in Australia to hunt for and capture three potentially deadly Australian funnel web spiders.
They then took the spiders back to their laboratory "for milking".
This involved coaxing the spider to release its venom, which can then be sucked up using pipettes.
The scientists honed in on a protein in the venom and recreated a version of it in their lab.
They then injected this Hi1a into the lab rats.
Stroke patient is treated by a paramedicSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYImage caption-Researchers say the protein "provides exceptional levels of protection for eight hours after stroke onset"
  • A stroke is a brain attack that happens when the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off or there is bleeding on the brain
  • Every two seconds, someone in the world will have a stroke
  • Almost 17 million people who had never had a stroke before had one in 2010
  • Stroke is the second most common cause of death, causing about 6.7 million deaths each year, one every five seconds
  • Almost one in every eight deaths is caused by stroke
  • The burden of stroke-related illness, disability and early death is set to double within the next 15 years
Source: Stroke Association
They found that the protein blocked acid-sensing ion channels in the brain - something the researchers say are key drivers of brain damage after stroke.
Prof Glenn King, who led the research, said the protein showed "great promise as a future stroke treatment".
"We believe that we have, for the first time, found a way to minimise the effects of brain damage after a stroke.
"Hi1a even provides some protection to the core brain region most affected by oxygen deprivation, which is generally considered unrecoverable due to the rapid cell death caused by stroke."
The research was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Dr Kate Holmes, deputy director for Research at the Stroke Association, said: "We do not have an accurate picture of what happens in human brains from this research, therefore, it is currently unknown if this could be a successful treatment option for humans in the future.
"We welcome any treatment that has the potential to reduce the damage caused by stroke, particularly if this can benefit people who are unable to arrive at hospital quickly.
"Current treatments must be given in half this time period, and it is too early for us to know if this research can offer an alternative for stroke patients.
"We urge for stroke to be treated as an emergency - the sooner a person can get to hospital after a stroke, the sooner the right treatment can be received, which can improve survival and help recovery."

HOW SRI LANKA COMMISSIONS AWAY THE DISAPPEARED


Image: Disappeared day  30.08.2016 in Colombo (c) s.deshapriya.

Sri Lanka BriefBy Shiran Illanperuma.-19/03/2017

 Parliament last year approved the establishment of a Permanent Office for Missing Persons (OMP), in an attempt to address the country’s ugly legacy of enforced disappearances that dates back to the ’70s, with the repression of the first JVP uprising.

But for women like 55-year old Yogarasa Kanaharanjini, who is currently leading a 200-strong protest by relatives of the disappeared in the war-scarred northern town of Kilinochchi, the idea of the OMP is neither impressive nor promising.“Many families have waited for over eight years already,” she told Roar. “We have written letters to politicians, complained to the Human Rights Commission, and spoken at hearings for the Paranagama Commission, and the Consultation Task Force for Reconciliation ‒ and achieved nothing. How will the OMP be any different?” she asks.

Indeed, the OMP is the latest in a long line of domestic mechanisms meant to find answers for the families of those forcibly disappeared. Since the early ’90s, at least ten Presidential Commissions of Inquiry have been launched into the matter of enforced disappearances.

Not all the final reports of these commissions were made publicly available, but the few that did, revealed shocking findings that incriminate the state and the military. Their recommendations, too, echo calls from civil society that continue today.

Premadasa’s Triptych

President Premadasa’s Commissions conveniently avoided investigating the most critical years when enforced disappearances flourished. Image courtesy Getty Images

Former UNP President, Ranasinghe Premadasa, was the first to try and tackle “Involuntary Removals of Persons” through a Commission of Inquiry in 1991. The mandate of this Commission was never extended; however, new warrants were issued in 1992 and 1993.

After Premadasa’s assassination by the LTTE in 1993, his temporary successor, Prime Minister D. J. Wijetunge, revoked the warrants of the three previous Commissions of Inquiry and initiated yet another Commission. The end result was four legally distinct Commissions, and no publicly available reports to show for it.

However, a publication by Law and Society Trust titled Sri Lanka State of Human Rights 1994, claims that these commissions “had submitted reports on at least 142 cases of disappearance to successive Presidents between January 1991 and the end of 1994. In some cases at least, the reports are believed to contain evidence implicating individual officers in perpetrating disappearances.”

CBK’s ‘Zonal’ Commissions

President Kumaratunga’s decision to appoint three separate teams led to varied methodologies and results in their respective regions. Image courtesy TELO

After the SLFP swept into power in 1994, President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga set about establishing three ‘zonal’ Commissions of Inquiry into Involuntary Removals and Disappearances. Each was mandated to look into disappearances starting from 1988, within their specific geographical jurisdictions.

Originally given a four-month deadline, the commissions had their mandate extended multiple times until their final reports were submitted in 1997. Their work however, was still left unfinished and a fourth “All-Island” Commission of Inquiry was set up by Kumaratunga in 1998 to follow up unfinished cases. Its final report was published in 2001.

All of the final reports from the Kumaratunga-appointed commissions are now accessible at the National Library of Sri Lanka. Many of their recommendations are chillingly reminiscent of calls from civil society activists today.

Military Impunity

A staggering 90% of enforced disappearances were ascribed to the Sri Lankan military and police, with the remaining 10% being ascribed to paramilitary groups like the LTTE, according to the Final Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the Involuntary Removal or Disappearance of Persons in the Northern and Eastern Provinces.

Working under conditions of active warfare, the commission noted difficulties when attempting to obtain information from the military and police. “The Army arrested people in large numbers. The Army only can answer what happened to the corpus of those arrested,” the report said.

Perhaps most startling is that the report even went as far as to name several Police officers and military personnel, regarding whom the report said that “There is enough evidence in our files for initiating prosecution.”

Political Agendas

“There is enough and more evidence to indicate that most of the victims [of enforced disappearances] were organisers etc. of the SLFP… branded as JVPers and their names given to the Police and Armed Forces for elimination,” reads the the Final Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the Involuntary Removal or Disappearance of Persons in the Central, North Western, North Central, and Uva Provinces.
The report goes on to implicate the UNP government of the time, claiming that, “there are a few Grama Niladharis who helped the Armed Forces to illegally remove persons,” and that, “they should be severely dealt with.”

A recommendation by the report that is salient even today is that the “Government should undertake a general overhaul of its emergency legislation [the Prevention of Terrorism Act]… to ensure that the present legislation conforms to accepted international standards regarding due process and treatment of process.”

Racial Dimensions

The Final Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the Involuntary Removal or Disappearance of Persons in the Western, Southern and Sabaragamuwa Provinces investigated abductions linked to both the JVP insurrection in the South and the ethnic conflict in Colombo.

The report makes acknowledgement of the distinction between the two conflicts, arguing that, “the issue of the involuntary removal/disappearances in Colombo of persons of Tamil origin should not be subsumed in the phenomenon of involuntary removals/disappearances that occurred in Southern Sri Lanka.”

The report goes on to note that criminal investigations into enforced disappearances were often distorted, “to conceal more than to reveal” in the few instances where “authorities could not refrain from semblance of an investigation.”

State Excess

The Final Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the Involuntary Removal or Disappearance of Persons (All-Island) collated much of the same data as the three zonal commissions that preceded it.

Many of the recommendations were echoed in greater detail. Indeed, just like its predecessors, the report emphasises that, “The bulk of its recommendations for confronting Sri Lanka’s recent legacy of unaccountable power and violence concern legal reforms to control the excesses of state power.”

In total, the report found 21,215 verified cases of enforced disappearances. Of the many perpetrators linked to these cases, less than 500 have been indicted.

The Rajapaksa Era

The reports commissioned by President Rajapaksa were far less critical than those of his predecessors’. Image courtesy AFP

Towards the end of the war in 2006, President Mahinda Rajapaksa set up the Presidential Commission of Inquiry Regarding the Incidents of Abductions, Disappearances and Attacks on Civilians Resulting in Deaths Throughout the Island ‒ the final report of which was more forgiving than its predecessors.

“The Police must be appraised of and taught Penal Code, the Police Ordinance, the Emergency Regulations, the Constitutional safeguards of citizens, and at the same time, how to tackle a crime… Lapses appear to have been due to ignorance, rather than intentional. They were indifferent and sleepy,” reads one of the reports’ assessments.

In 2013, four years after the end of the war, President Rajapaksa set up the Presidential Commission to Investigate into Complaints Regarding Missing Persons. This was the last commission of inquiry into the matter and has become known to the public as the Paranagama Commission. A final report was never made public.

Incrimination And Accountability

A bizarre outcome of successive Commissions of Inquiry is that the Sri Lankan state has managed the odd feat of perpetrating crimes, commissioning inquiries into said crimes, and subsequently publishing reports that incriminate itself. Yet, accountability has been all but illusory.

Thyagi Ruwanpathirana, a former researcher for Colombo-based Centre for Policy Alternatives and the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation, explains that Commissions of Inquiry “are not meant to be initiatives that seek out criminal liability.” Instead, the Commissions are “set up to receive information or evidence that do not always live up to the standard of evidence admissible in a court of law.”

“It is therefore a misconception to assume that findings of Commissions of Inquiry will lead to indictments and prosecutions… Commissions do not have the power to initiate legal proceedings themselves, therefore the government, upon receiving Commission reports, must direct the relevant actors to take necessary action in line with the findings,” she states.

Onwards With OMP?

Protesting for over 26 days now, these relatives of the disappeared in Kilinochchi express little faith in the proposed OMP. Image courtesy writer.

Unlike the Commissions that came before it, the Office of Missing Persons has considerably more power ‒ if it is ever fully established by the President. Ruwanpathirana suggests that the OMP has the unique opportunity to “build on existing information that has been made available, without reinventing the wheel.”

But winning the faith and participation of victim families will not be easy. From hunger strikes in Vavuniya to the sit-ins in Kilinochchi, families of those disappeared during the last stages of the war are losing patience. Hundreds of thousands more across the island have lost hope for their family members reported missing as far back as the ’80s and ’90s.

Says Ruwanpathirana, “The OMP is essentially that next step ‒ to actually probe into, investigate and deliver answers. Therefore, ideally, at least a few cases where tracing inquiries are successfully carried out to a point of conclusion will be the best measure of the OMP’s credibility. However, this is not as easy as it seems. It could take months to carry out conclusive investigations and perhaps even years to recover remains ‒ even where this is possible.”

“The lack of faith in state initiatives to find answers is precisely why participation of affected families in both the OMP’s membership and staff is crucial… This is all to do with seeking the truth. Some affected families seek more than just truth and one must keep in mind that the OMP does not guarantee justice. Its primary focus is truth and clarifying the fate of the disappeared.”

Editor’s note: The full text of publicly released commission reports can be found at the National Library of Sri Lanka. Kishali Pinto-Jayawardene’s book, A Legacy to Remember; Sri Lanka’s Commissions of Inquiry, contains summaries of some of these reports.

Featured image courtesy writer

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