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

Sunday, April 9, 2017

India sends water, rice as SL faces severe drought
2017-04-09
With Sri Lanka staring at one of the worst droughts in the last four decades, India has provided an emergency assistance of water and rice to the Island country.
The government has already handed over eight water bowsers to the Sri Lankan authorities and the consignment of rice would be delivered soon.
“In response to a request from the Government of Sri Lanka for drought relief assistance, Government of India has announced the decision to provide 8 water bowsers and 100 metric tonnes of rice to Sri Lanka. The supply of these items is in the nature of emergency assistance to augment relief measures undertaken in the wake of severe drought faced by Sri Lanka,” External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj told Parliament in a written reply.
The lorry-mounted water bowsers were given to the Government of Sri Lanka on March 21. “India has always been among the first to respond to requests from the neighbouring countries in times of crisis. The current gifting of the water bowsers and rice is part of that policy,” Swaraj added.
Sri Lanka is suffering from the worst drought in 40 years with over a million people facing acute water shortages. The Island country has experienced prolonged dry season with some districts having 60-70 percent less rainfall. The local wells and reservoirs are running dry.
The harvest of rice is going to be hit due to water shortage and the prospect of rice shortage later this year is looming large. The Sri Lankan government has also taken slew of measures to contain the fallout of the rice shortage. It has already waived off taxes on rice imports and is expected to increase rice imports to meet the demand at home.
Water shortage has also compounded problems for the energy sector of the country that depends on hydro-power.(Indian Express)

NE housing project slashed: Fresh tenders and fair play urged


If the Government intends to slash its original proposal of 65,000 prefabricated houses down to 6,000 houses for the war-displaced, it must call a fresh tender as many more contractors will qualify for the smaller project and offer better prices, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Parliamentarian M. A. Sumanthiran said this week.
Despite sustained opposition to the project, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Management (CCEM) last week granted approval for the construction of 6,000 prefabricated houses in the North and East by international steel giant ArcelorMittal. The proposal will go to Cabinet for ratification.

The Sunday Times Sri LankaIf the Government intends to slash its original proposal of 65,000 prefabricated houses down to 6,000 houses for the war-displaced, it must call a fresh tender as many more contractors will qualify for the smaller project and offer better prices, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Parliamentarian M. A. Sumanthiran said this week.
Despite sustained opposition to the project, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Management (CCEM) last week granted approval for the construction of 6,000 prefabricated houses in the North and East by international steel giant ArcelorMittal. The proposal will go to Cabinet for ratification.
But the original tender, floated by the Rehabilitation and Resettlement Ministry, had been for 65,000 houses and not 6,000, pointed out Mr. Sumanthiran. The TNA has unanimously rejected prefabricated steel dwellings and called for the cheaper, culturally-suitable brick-and-mortar houses.
“With regard to the original 65,000 houses proposal, a Cabinet Appointed Negotiating Committee called for it to be cancelled and for fresh bids to be called,” Mr Sumanthiran said.”Resettlement Minister D. M. Swaminathan himself presented a Cabinet paper for fewer prefabricated houses and suggested fresh bids.”
“In any case, you cannot rely on the previous tender price for 65,000 and do 6,000 houses because there could be so many others in the local construction industry with the capacity to tender their bids for the smaller number,” he pointed out. “If this story of 6,000 houses being agreed upon by the CCEM is true, we will challenge the process.
“And why is the Government not considering the alternate proposal put forward by civil society with the support of five local banks?” he asked. “That project can result in 102,000 houses for the same money the Government is willing to spend as payment to a foreign bank in a foreign currency!”
The housing need in the North and East is dire and acute, he said. “The Government is using the desperate need of the people to force prefabricated houses down their throat, for the benefit of a few individuals who stand to benefit from this,” he said.
Northern Province Chief Minister C. V. Wigneswaran endorsed Mr Sumanthiran’s criticism of the project. “Prefab steel houses are not suitable for the climate of the North and East, environment or ambience. Our engineers have given me detailed reports saying so,” he said.
“The continued insistence on foisting these houses on our Province smacks of the hidden needs and agendas on the part of the powers that be,” Mr. Wigneswaran said. “What happened to the Minister’s undertaking to get bank loans and put up the houses the traditional way? It appears the Government wants to force our people to accept what they give. They ignore the social implications.”
“There would be division among our people, which the Government seems to want to promote,” he said. “The 6,000 prefab house owners would become the haves and the others the have-nots. There is a possibility that reaction from the have-nots might ostracise those who opt to take these houses. I would appeal to the Minister to reconsider.”
The project, which has been in the pipeline since 2015, has been stalled by widespread protests. The TNA said it was “totally opposed to prefabricated steel houses” and called for traditional brick houses in keeping with the culture and way of life of the North-East people. All sixteen MPs of the party endorsed this position.
But the project is openly backed by Rehabilitation and Resettlement Minister Swaminathan. The TNA claimed that the minister had made personal telephone calls to several of its MPs, inviting them to make requests for prefabricated houses in their respective electorates. In the face of resistance, President Maithripala Sirisena passed off the project to Special Projects Minister Sarath Amunugama for a recommendation. Last week, he came to the CCEM with the proposal to grant a contract for 6,000 houses to ArcelorMittal. It was approved.
The initial proposal–which would have forced to Government to borrow US$1 billion to implement–was to build 65,000 prefab steel houses for war-affected families in the North and East. But the prefab steel dwellings have been objected to on multiple grounds including climatic unsuitability, flimsy construction, lack of durability, unjustifiably high cost and so on.
A Cabinet Appointed Negotiating Committee (CANC) rejected the project and recommended that fresh tenders be called. A group of civil society agencies and persons even put forward an alternate proposal for 102,000 masonry houses at a cost of just under Rs 1 million per house, using local labour and funded by a consortium of local banks.
Mr Sumanthiran said the project smacked of “grand-scale fraud, which is clearly apparent from the cost of Rs 2.1 million per house, which later dropped to Rs 1.6 million”.

Derana TV which abused its TV transmission asked to give explanation before cancellation of media license !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -09.April.2017, 5.20AM) Derana media chain had been found guilty of using its electronic transmission  frequency  to distort the statement made by president Maithripala Sirisena in regard to  war  heroes being hauled up in courts . The Derana media chain  a public property engaged in business has  in between the “Sathviru Sanhinda’ program made the distorted transmissions.
The three member independent committee that was appointed to inquire into this had found Derana guilty . The secretary to mass media ministry Nimal Bopage ,lawyer has sent a letter to Derana calling for an explanation in its defense before he could take further action.

The president earlier on expressed his displeasure in regard to  war heroes being hauled up in courts . There, he made reference to  war heroes who fought the war being summoned to courts without his knowledge , and  not in relation to ex defense secretary being hauled up in courts. 
Derana TV which made the relevant video footage , had included ‘ex defense secretary’ in it as an additional  part , of its own accord.  Hence in the transmission  ‘ summoning ex defense secretary and commanders of the forces’ was broadcast  , against which the  president had taken offense . 
At the same time , a dedicated group that   worked with commitment on behalf of good governance mounted a stiff opposition against the president alleging that the latter is seeking to safeguard ex defense secretary .The reason for  this was Derana’s deliberately distorted transmission of president’s statement .
When the mass media secretary by virtue of the legal powers vested in him  made inquiries from the relevant Institution , Derana began launching scathing attacks via its media  on the mass media secretary who used their channel .
Derana therefore was found guilty following an investigation to ascertain whether the mass media ministry was subjected to vilification owing to Derana.  
Though Derana was intimated to make its representations on its behalf via its representative , they ignored it , the recent  letter sent by the mass media secretary indicates. 
The mass media secretary has therefore  sent this  letter to Derana granting 14 days time to file answers on its behalf. 
In any event , if the Derana channel continues with its villainy and obnoxious  tactics without condescending to  a peaceful settlement or a public apology , the prospects are , it could face a minimum punishment of suspension of its electronic frequency media license for three months.

The country’s  electronic frequency  being part of so called public property , it is the government that renews the license annually of the transmission frequency leased out by it  to these private businessmen  subject to a number of terms and conditions . The licensee who abuses this public property in violation of the terms and conditions is liable to punishment . A number of  media Institutions have previously faced punishment .
A copy of the official letter sent by mass media secretary Bopage sent to Derana television executive director Madhawa Madawela  in connection with the misuse of its channel is herein. The image hereunder can be magnified by clicking on it , and by clicking again on the icon , the letter can be read after enlargement .
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by     (2017-04-09 00:03:59)

Massive fraud by RDA’s Pemasiri exposed

Massive fraud by RDA’s Pemasiri exposed
Apr 09, 2017

The then chairman of the Road Development Authority R.W.R. Pemasiri was directly involved in the financial irregularities committed during the previous regime in the construction of expressways and highways, ‘Sathhanda’ reports.

Pemasiri was also head of the tender committee of the RDA. He was appointed by Mahinda Rajapaksa as secretary to the ministry of highways, port and shipping as well. Abusing his offices, Pemasiri did not call for tenders, but gave the contracts to cronies of the Rajapaksas, obtained consultancy services at exorbitant rates and violated the road construction guidelines, according to the accusations leveled against him.
Correspondence between the UDA chairman, tender committee and the ministry, including the letters of permission, were all signed by Pemasiri. The subject minister at the time was Mahinda Rajapaksa himself. With the regime change on 08 January 2015, Pemasiri stopped reporting for duty and left to live in Australia.
The highways minister of the 100-day government Kabir Hashim told the media at the World Trade Centre that the biggest financial frauds in the Rajapaksa regime had been committed at the highways ministry, but not even a complaint had been made to the FCID regarding them so far.
Daya Nettasinghe - Sathhanda

The Science-Mathematics nexus

The effectiveness of mathematics in the sciences 


article_imageby Kumar David- 

The fallout from what I thought would be a simple piece ("Ramanujan, Hardy and the God debate") which appeared on 26 March has been nuclear. Chief offender, Gamini Kulatunga, has peppered me with e-mails while Rajan Philips and others have been less cruel and fired only a few volleys. There have been many contributions in web Comments (Siri Gamage, Lester, Dr M. Gonlaskorale, AVB, Edwin Rodrigo and others). I declare upfront that I cannot do justice to all for two reasons. First, I am not competent to comment on spiritually oriented topics such as the Stages of Understanding in Buddhism or alternate non-Western knowledge systems (sorry Edwin and Lester) and I am a layman on the brain "100 billion axons and 100 trillion connections" and "randomness of billions of neurons and trillions of synapses arranged as tiny networks" (sorry Dr MG, Lester and AVB). These are significant topics for readers to follow up as I intend to do. Secondly, within the limits of a regular column, I have to be restrained and not bite off more than can be chewed.

I have now declared the limits of this essay; it will only explore the questions: Does maths in itself discovers new truths about the physical world? Can it create scientific knowledge? Does its use in a scientific thesis (Calculus and Newton’s Laws, Maxwell’s equations and Electromagnetism, Riemannian geometry and General Relativity) create knowledge not contained in the scientific theory itself? I say NO, I am on the side of the naysayers. But I am in bad company.

Einstein is reported to have remarked: "How is it that mathematics, being after all a product of human thought which is independent of experience, is so admirably appropriate to the objects of reality?"

Eugene Wigner a Nobel Prize winner wrote a 1960 article with the title: ‘The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences’; so you get his drift.

Mario Livio described as a renowned astrophysicist and author of 400 scientific papers asks: "Is math an invention of the brain? Or does it exist in an abstract world, humans merely discovering its truths?"

As opposed to this there was a certain contrarian chap who intoned: "The question whether objective truth can be attributed to human thinking is not a question of theory; it is a practical question. Man must prove the truth – the reality and power, the this-sidedness of thinking - in practice. The dispute over the reality and non-reality of thinking that is isolated from practice is a purely scholastic question."

I declare I am on the side of the contrarian chap and would to go further to replace ‘purely scholastic’ with ‘utterly meaningless’. Regarding the Einstein quote above, unless it is a fabrication he is wrong or at least incomplete. A genius can sometimes be wrong; Einstein, Newton, Plato and Gautama Siddhartha are not divine; their contributions are profound, but since human they are fallible. Einstein goofed at the heart of general relativity, inserting a fudge factor politely called the cosmological constant lambda (?), which later he shamefacedly admitted was "my greatest blunder".


Maths in Science

Let’s get to the heart of the matter: "Do the powerful effects of mathematics in science mean that the maths itself creates new knowledge absent in the scientific thesis to which it is applied?" Mario Levi (ML) is agnostic on this. I quote from his Math: Discovered, Invented or Both in Nova, 13 April 2015.

"How is it possible that all the phenomena observed in classical electricity and magnetism can be explained by just four mathematical equations? James Clerk Maxwell showed in 1864 that the equations predicted that varying electric or magnetic fields generate certain waves - the familiar electromagnetic waves (light, radio, x-rays) - eventually detected by German physicist Heinrich Hertz in the 1880s".

ML is confused. Are Maxwell’s Equations (ME) physics or mathematics? Their sheer beauty which can banish Cleopatra from a bridal chamber must not seduce one to forget that the body within is physics, the raiment without radiant mathematics. It can be written in two forms, differential or integral.

Forgive me this one unavoidable paragraphs; I will get back to terra firma fast. The first equation (B = 0) rather flamboyantly says "There is no true magnetism", meaning magnetism is a product of electric currents. The second equation says the electric field emanating from a region depends on the net electric charges contained therein. The famous third equation

known as Faraday’s Law of Induction, better known to schoolboys as the flux-cutting rule, is about how electricity is made in generators. The final equation supplements the first and says how much magnetism is made by a given electric current. Nobody needs to follow the maths since, qualitatively, what is being said is pretty straightforward.

Next the maths is manipulated to the n-th degree to derive weird and wonderful results; radio, TV and mobile-phone reception, electrical surges and marvellous circuits and devices. But it is not the maths that underpins it all; the maths is a handmaiden to extract implications that are already there.

A resplendent garment worn by ME after 1905 is its Special Relativity extension. This version is used to say things about places (frames of reference) moving at very fast constant speeds, close to the speed of light, relative to each other. (If there is acceleration we are in deep shit and need general relativity which is not easy to understand or explain).

Levi backtracks and after much meandering concedes the contrarian chap’s point. "Personally, I believe that by asking whether mathematics is discovered or invented, we forget that it is an intricate combination of inventions and discoveries. I posit that humans invent mathematical concepts - numbers, shapes, sets, lines - by abstracting from the world around". We can forgive his circumlocution, but a materialist would not have needed so much obliqueness before getting to the point.

A similar case can be made about Newtonian gravitation and classical dynamics on the science side and Calculus on the maths side, or general relativity as physics and Riemannian geometry as maths, or the relations of quantum electrodynamics as maths serving science. The wave-particle duality and Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle in no way disrupt the materialist standpoint. But I concede the jury is still out - exclusively at the quantum level – on "photon entanglement" ("quantum non-locality", what Einstein termed "spooky action at a distance"). This has no parallel in the macro world; trying telling the judge that when you had sex with that minor you were suspended in a state of probabilistic superposition! I am also unable to accept the fad that the real world does not exist in the absence of a conscious observer.


Gödel’s incompleteness theorem

One of my interlocutors (Gamini) has suggested that I address Gödel’s Theorem. A summary of the famous theorem from Wikipedia, with small linguistic adjustments, follows. Kurt Gödel (1906-1979) was a 25 year fresh graduate of the University of Vienna when he formulated it.

1. If a system is consistent, it cannot be

complete.

2. The consistency of its axioms cannot be proven within a system

The concepts are pretty self-evident – rigorous formal proof is not. The axioms of Euclid’s geometry cannot be proved within geometry (Gödel’s terrain was number theory). Now what is the relevance of all this to our science-maths concerns? The relevance is that after a scientific revolution, in passing causing one maths to be thrown out and another to find favour, then the former’s axioms too go out of the window. Euclid’s axioms lost out when general relativity lent on Riemann; pairing (quarks and leptons must exist in pairs) in the Standard Model of elementary particles is indeed a strange coupling-axiom; the axioms of quantum electrodynamics are an even odder genre. Maths is a handmaiden to be discarded at physics’ behest, like firing a maid when she no longer satisfies the boss’s desires.


Enlightenment and Divinity

The Buddha was enlightened but human – no scholar says he is divine. This raises problems for a certain brand of Buddhists that I have come across only in Sri Lanka. These are people who claim he knew about atomic structure, the concepts of quantum electrodynamics can be found in his philosophy and such like mumbo-jumbo. These folks don’t see the pickle they are getting into. Science is moving and changing, so if their version of Buddha is committed to current science, than in a hundred years, when science has moved on, he will be out of kilter! I wish people would think before they open their mouths.

Edwin Rodrigo wants to make me a Buddhist; he is pushing at an open door. My Marxism in no way inhibits appreciation of the Buddha’s wisdom on mind and behaviour. Phew! In one essay I have taken on Einstein, Gödel and some people’s version of the Buddha; must stop before I am certified insane and locked up in a padded cell.

Five dead in clashes at Palestinian camp in Lebanon


Two days of fighting in Ain al-Hilweh also leave 50 dead
Smoke rises from violence in Ain al-Hilweh (AFP)

AFP-Sunday 9 April 2017 
The toll in two days of clashes in the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon rose to five on Sunday, medics said, as local factions worked to implement a security plan.
Clashes erupted in the camp late Friday as Palestinian factions participating in a joint security force began deploying throughout the area in the southern city of Sidon.
They came under fire from a local Islamic extremist group in part of the camp, prompting clashes that Lebanese and Palestinian medics said Sunday have now killed five people and wounded at least 30, mostly civilians.
The dead were two civilians, two members of the joint Palestinian security force and one member of the extremist group, the medical sources said.
The fighting has prompted security measures outside the camp, which Lebanese security forces do not enter by long-standing agreement.
An adjacent highway has been cut and patients moved from the Sidon government hospital next to the camp.
House riddle with bullets in camp near Sidon, Lebanon (Reuters)
Palestinian officials in the camp called Sunday on remaining members of a group led by a local extremist to surrender with their weapons.
Around noon, the intensity of the clashes decreased after earlier fighting that sent clouds of black smoke up from the camp.
Ain al-Hilweh is home to several armed factions and has been plagued by intermittent clashes between them as well as against smaller extremist groups.
Lebanon's army does not enter Palestinian refugee camps, where security is managed by joint committees of Palestinian factions.
Ain al-Hilweh is home to some 61,000 Palestinians, including 6,000 who have fled the war in Syria.
Basel Ghattas smiles at camera while sitting down in courtroom
Basel Ghattas sits at the Rishon Lezion court near Tel Aviv on 23 December, one day after his arrest on suspicion of smuggling mobile phones to Palestinian prisoners.Oren ZivActiveStills
Omar Karmi- 6 April 2017
Basel Ghattas, a former member of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, was convicted in March on a slew of charges after being caught smuggling mobile phones and documents to so-called security prisoners in Israeli detention.
As a result of a plea bargain, Ghattas – a parliamentarian for the Joint List, a coalition of Palestinian parties in Israel that includes his party, Balad – now faces two years in jail and, depending on the presiding judge, awaits to hear the length of any probation, whether he will pay a fine and if the conviction will impact any possible political role in the future.
The sentencing is due this Sunday.
In a wide-ranging interview, Ghattas told The Electronic Intifada that he had no regrets over actions he undertook for humanitarian and conscientious reasons. He also said the current situation for Palestinian citizens of Israel was rapidly deteriorating as Israeli society moves ever rightward.
“You’ll find a less and less heterogeneous society among Israeli Jews these days,” Ghattas said. “What historically was the Left, the labor movement that actually created the country, is being weakened all the time. Within the Israeli consensus, right-wing values are prevailing.”

Inhumane treatment

In December, Ghattas was caught trying to smuggle envelopes containing 12 phones, 16 SIM cards, two cell phone chargers and a pair of earphones into Ketziot, a notorious desert prison that was first opened in 1988 during the first intifada, was closed again in 1995 as part of the Oslo accords and then reopened again in 2002, during the second intifada.
Ghattas insisted that passing along the envelopes had been a humanitarian gesture and a response to what he called the inhumane conditions in which prisoners are held.
“I am fully engaged with the issue of security prisoners,” he told The Electronic Intifada. “Over the past four years [since becoming a member of the Knesset], I have seen the inhumane conditions they live in.”
Israel classifies prisoners into two: criminal and “security” prisoners. The latter are almost exclusively Palestinian, including Palestinian citizens of Israel, and are defined as those who have committed crimes where the motive was “nationalistic” and which harmed or intended to harm state security.
Once classified as security prisoners, their treatment is different to the rest of the prison population and also to that of Jewish security prisoners. Notably, their ability to communicate with the outside world is severely restricted.
They have no access to phones or other means of communication and are allowed only visits from the closest of relatives. They are banned from prison furloughs or even petitioning for early release.
The installation, in February, of radiators in security prisoners’ cells, only came after years of lobbying by rights groups.
The few Jewish security prisoners avoid the more stringent of these restrictions, particularly on communication, since these are applied to those with links or suspected links to “hostile organizations.” No Jewish organization is on this list.
Such treatment, said Ghattas, citing the case of one prisoner who is not allowed to see a sister, one of his two remaining closest relatives, because she is from his father’s first marriage and doesn’t count as a first-degree relative, amounts to cruelty and spurred him to act.

Uncharted territory

“These unjustified measures are taken only against Palestinian security prisoners,” Ghattas said. As legislator, he said, he had brought the issue up repeatedly in parliament, in relevant committees and with authorities. But to no avail.
“The extent of this cruelty, of the injustice, is what made me try to help them.”
Once charged, Ghattas found himself in uncharted territory. He was the first sitting member of Israel’s parliament to be stripped of immunity during an investigation, a privilege that is usually lost only once an indictment is filed with a court.
He was the first to be arrested during the investigation and, also unprecedented, the first to face a list of charges by Israel’s attorney general without first having been granted a hearing.
“Almost everything that was done to me was unprecedented in the history of Israel,” said Ghattas. “I have been treated very differently from Jewish Knesset members or ministers who were accused of much more serious charges and were later convicted and sent to jail for many years.”
He cited Ehud Olmert, the former Israeli prime minister who was eventually convicted on corruption charges, as well as Moshe Katsav, a former president who served five years in prison for rape and sexual harassment.
Ghattas also pointed to Benjamin Netanyahu, the current prime minister, who is continuing in his post under a cloud of corruption allegations, at least some of which could lead to indictment.
“[Netanyahu] is suspected of very serious issues of taking bribes from friends but he has not been arrested for even one hour. And as a free person, as prime minister, he can do everything possible to disrupt the investigation.”
After much hesitation, Ghattas eventually agreed to the plea bargain, which saw some charges dropped but also saw him plead guilty to one count of acting in circumstances that could lead, knowingly or unknowingly, to support for a terrorist act.
“It was really not easy for me to accept this,” he said, but in the end he had little choice: the alternative would have risked a longer prison sentence.
Sentencing on Sunday will determine the length of any probation served after the two-year prison sentence is up, as well as whether his actions will be considered “moral turpitude,” which might affect his ability to hold political office in the future.

Unequal before the law

Because of his resignation, Ghattas did not also become the first sitting parliamentarian to test out a new law – passed last July – that could have seen fellow lawmakers vote on his expulsion. The so-called suspension bill empowers lawmakers to oust a colleague on grounds of incitement to racism or support for violence against the state.
Ghattas was in little doubt that the law would have been used against him had he not resigned. The law is widely seen as targeting Palestinian lawmakers, a view Ghattas agreed with.
It stipulates that 90 parliamentarians have to agree on expulsion, and, Ghattas commented, who can “imagine a situation where 90 Knesset members come together unless the one being removed is Palestinian?”
“We had an old joke,” he said. “The only Palestinians enjoying equality in Israel were the Arab Knesset members. In my case this really is a joke. Even Arab Knesset members don’t enjoy equal rights and even immunity doesn’t protect them when the establishment decides to persecute them.”
And that law is symptomatic of a concerted effort by the current government to make “the gap between Arabs and Jews as wide as possible,” he said.
“This government is the most radical, most fanatic,” Ghattas said. This became very apparent on the last election day, when Netanyahu warned supporters that Palestinian citizens were turning out “in droves.”
“Every week he speaks against us. He has created a new reason for his voters to be fearful. He did that against Iran for many years. Now he [has] invented a new enemy: the Arab citizens of Israel.”
This “incitement” is reflected in what Ghattas said was an “unprecedented number of anti-Arab, anti-democratic laws” being proposed in parliament, including a bill to ban the adhan, or call to prayer, because of noise pollution.
That bill, he said, has nothing to do with noise pollution, for which there are perfectly adequate laws already. Rather, this is “a message that Israel does not tolerate the adhan in general, which is part of the history of the country and the indigenous culture of the country.”
Nevertheless, as a politician it was his duty to remain positive. And, he said, Israel could not continue on the path it was on, one unique to what he called “colonial-settler states.”
“Such countries do not actually leave their colonial projects and become normal states, unless they are punished or pay a price for their continued occupation and settlement.”
A reckoning, he said, will come either in the form of a violent conflict – “Luckily, the Palestinians know that their way now to liberation does not go through such a bloody confrontation” – or through international boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS).
“At a certain stage, Israel has to face this reality or it will end being treated like Iran – certain international mechanisms have to be put in place to force Israel to live up to its duties and responsibilities.”
Omar Karmi is a former Jerusalem and Washington, DC, correspondent for The National newspaper.

Deadly blasts hit Coptic churches in Tanta, Alexandria

Powerful bomb blasts strike packed Coptic Christian churches in Tanta and Alexandria, in an assault claimed by ISIL.



09 Apr 2017

At least 27 people have been killed in an explosion inside a church in the Egyptian Nile Delta city of Tanta, local media reported, as state television said another blast killed 16 in front of a church in Alexandria.

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) armed group on Sunday claimed responsibility for both attacks, in a statement via its Amaq website.


Following the blasts, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ordered troops be deployed across the country to help secure "vital facilities", according to a statement by his office.

The first attack occurred in the Coptic church of Mar Girgis, also known as St George, which was packed with worshippers marking Palm Sunday, a Christian feast commemorating the entry of Jesus Christ into Jerusalem. 

Egypt's state television reported that at least 69 people were wounded in the attack.

Several hours after the bombing in Tanta, another explosion hit in front of Saint Mark's church in Alexandria, killing at least 16 people, according to the health ministry. 

Media reports said dozens were wounded in the attack, which state TV said was a suicide bombing.

'Bodies torn apart'

Witnesses in Alexandria described a bloody and chaotic scene. 

"Lots of bodies were torn apart and scattered on the floor," one man who was standing on the church's altar when the bomb exploded said. 

Another witness said she saw flames flaring up to the church ceiling. 

"There was thick smoke, I couldn't see anyone," she said. "We heard voices telling us to leave quickly. People were pushing so much that the gate bent." 

Some on social media praised at least two police officers who they say stopped the suicide bomber from entering the Alexandria church. They were killed in the blast. 
Security personnel secured the scene of the bomb explosion inside Mar Girgis church in Tanta [Khaled Elfiqi/EPA]
Dozens were wounded in the bomb explosion at Mar Girgis Coptic church during Palm Sunday mass [Khaled Elfiqi/EPA]
Samer Shehata, associate professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, told Al Jazeera the attacks show a "tremendous security lapse" by Egyptian authorities. 

"In the last few months, there have been an increased number of attacks on Egyptian Copts, individually, as well as on churches," Shehata said, adding that the church in Tanta received a threat 10 days ago. 
"I do think this represents a lack of seriousness on the part of the state in really securing the Coptic community and places that could potentially be attacked."  


Timothy Kaldas, non-resident fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy, said the attacks were designed to create religious strife.

"It is alarming to see a specific religious group being targeted, which is going to rattle the Coptic community and many Egyptians in general," Kaldas told Al Jazeera.
The scene of the explosion in front of the church in Alexandria [Fawzy Abdel Hamied/Reuters]

Copts repeatedly targeted

The bombings were the latest in a series of assaults on Egypt's Christian minority, who make up about 10 percent of the population and have been repeatedly targeted by armed groups.

They also come just weeks before Pope Francis is due to visit Egypt.

CBC TV showed footage from inside the church in Tanta, with a large number of people gathered around what appeared to be lifeless, bloody bodies covered with papers.

bombing at Cairo's largest Coptic cathedral killed at least 25 people and wounded 49 in December, many of them women and children, in the deadliest attack on Egypt's Christian minority in years. 
Source: Al Jazeera News

59 Ways to Kill a Russian Reset

All it takes is a few dozen Tomahawk missiles and a lecture on human rights.
59 Ways to Kill a Russian Reset

No automatic alt text available.BY AMIE FERRIS-ROTMAN-APRIL 7, 2017

MOSCOW — Russia was swift in its response to a deadly U.S. missile strike on a Syrian air base overnight on Thursday.

By Friday morning, it had called the strike “illegal.” It summoned an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting, and its foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, compared the move to Washington’s 2003 invasion of Iraq. In a statement issued Friday morning, the Kremlin quoted Russian President Vladimir Putin as saying the move by U.S. President Donald Trump “inflicts substantial damage on Russian-American ties, which were already in a deplorable state.” In less than 12 hours, the combination of the late-night attack and Moscow’s speedy condemnation appears to have dealt a final blow to the fraying prospects of a renewed Russian-U.S. relationship. “That’s it,” wrote Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on his Facebook page. “The remains of the campaign fog have disappeared.”

Trump ordered the firing of 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles after a sarin gas attack earlier this week in Idlib province, which killed more than 70, including many children, and injured hundreds more. The United States blames the Syrian government for the attack — in a speech, Trump called the attack “barbaric” –but Moscow, which has been propping up Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, pointed its finger at a supposed leaking rebel chemical weapons depot.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is due in Moscow next week, where he is expected to meet with Putin and his counterpart, Lavrov. Previous statements by the Russian Foreign Ministry and the U.S. Embassy in Moscow indicated that both had hoped to discuss a range of issues, including Syria and joint counterterrorism efforts, following multiple statements by the Trump administration that it saw a Russian reset as an opportunity for cooperation in such areas as the fight against the Islamic State after years of rising tensions under the Obama administration.

But now, what was once touted by observers as a budding friendship between Trump and Putin increasingly looks like a standoff.

Washington says it warned Russia of its intention to attack the Al-Shayrat air base in Homs, where there are both Syrian and Russian warplanes. Nine planes were destroyed and a hangar was left in ruins, Russian state TV said. But the precaution seems to have done little to appease Moscow. The missile strikes reportedly killed at least 13 Syrians, including nine civilians, according to Syrian state media, and wounded several more, but, according to Lavrov, there were no Russian casualties. On Friday morning, Russian state TV broadcast continuous coverage of the strikes, emphasizing the extensive damage done to the air base, showing images of blazing fires and rows of charred planes and blackened aerial bombs.
The Russian Defense Ministry said it was “obvious” that the strike had been planned for some time, but that it still managed to show “extremely low” military effectiveness, saying 36 of the Tomahawks did not hit their target.

However it was intended, the Kremlin is treating Thursday night’s intervention as a precipitous escalation by the U.S. government of its involvement in Syria’s war. Before Thursday, Russia was proud of its position as the main outside player guiding the course of the Syria conflict. The Obama administration had largely left Russia free rein in the country.
Since entering the Syrian conflict in October 2015, Russians have largely thought of it as their war.
Since entering the Syrian conflict in October 2015, Russians have largely thought of it as their war. The Syrian army’s victories over both the rebels and the Islamic State — especially in eastern Aleppo — have been celebrated with gusto by Russian officials. The liberation of Islamic State-held areas has seeped into Russia’s cultural fabric and consciousness, inspiring heroic novels, video games, songs, and school skits and has boosted the careers of a slew of television and newspaper war reporters, who now have legions of fans on social media.

The war also still enjoys healthy support from the general Russian public. A recently published independent poll showed a fifth of Russians considered the conflict an important event last year, about the same proportion that felt the same about the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. Russian body bags are few enough (for now) to quell any comparisons to the disastrous war in Afghanistan, and Putin’s strategic military prowess is a source of pride for many Russians.

There were few signs before Thursday night’s attack that the new U.S. administration had any interest in changing this dynamic. As recently as last week, members of the Trump administration had signaled that the United States was happy to accept the status quo in Syria, and that it was “no longer” going to “focus on getting Assad out.” But on Wednesday, a shift appeared to be looming. Trump, in an appearance in the Rose Garden with King Abdullah of Jordan, said the use of chemical weapons had “crossed a lot of lines.” By late Thursday, rhetoric had turned into full-blown military intervention.

The Trump administration’s strategy in Syria is not yet clear — this could be the first of many such strikes aimed at regime change, or a one-off. But few issues irk Russia more than Western infringement into what Moscow considers its sphere of influence, and Russian state media wasted no time airing its disdain. “[Trump] needed this to reduce the intensity of criticism he receives from Congress and the media, and to maintain his rating,” military expert Igor Korotchenko said in the official parliament newspaper. “He wanted to show that he’s tougher and more decisive than Obama.”

The big question now is what Russia will do next. Russia’s Defense Ministry said Friday that it would strengthen Syrian air defenses in the near future but did not elaborate. It also did not give any indication as to what Russia’s defense forces were planning besides saying they would continue their operations in the country. It did say that it was suspending the hotline in place with the United States to prevent midair collisions over Syrian airspace. There were also unsubstantiated reports that Russian warships were returning to the eastern Mediterranean waters of Syria.

In a country where “whataboutism” is part of the national psyche, Russia was quick to point to Washington’s alleged failures after the strike in Syria. “This is a Western provocation in order to distract people’s attention from what is really happening in Mosul,” senior Russian lawmaker Leonid Slutsky, who oversees the parliament’s international affairs committee, told the state-run Rossiya 24 channel.

State TV aired plenty of footage of Mosul in Iraq on Friday, where an airstrike killed almost 300 people in late March, in the largest civilian death toll in two years. The U.S.-led coalition has said there is a “fair chance” it is responsible. Russia routinely points to America’s hand in civilian deaths in various crises around the globe as testament to what it says is Washington’s hypocrisy. The conflict in Yemen, where another U.S.-backed coalition is fighting the Islamic State, was also shown on Russian news on Friday, with malnourished children given lots of airtime. State TV also aired a collated history on the history of the Iraq War.

In the lead-up to Trump’s inauguration, many had warned that the prospects of a true reset with Russia — which the Obama administration had also tried to pursue until it soon fell apart — were always slim and that conflicts on issues such as the Iran nuclear deal, Syria, and Ukraine meant there were too many hurdles to greater cooperation between Moscow and Washington. This week, judging by reaction in Moscow, another attempt to forge closer relations appears to have collapsed, less than 100 days into a new administration.

“We now need to free ourselves from our illusions of a relationship with Trump,” said the analyst Korotchenko. “He doesn’t differ from Obama at all. He also uses international law like toilet paper.”
Photo credit: ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images

No peace in Syria until Assad is ousted, says Nikki Haley

In a departure from the administration’s previous stance, US ambassador to the UN suggests regime change is now one of its priorities
On 30 March Haley said getting Assad out was not a priority. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images


Staff and agencies-Sunday 9 April 2017
Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the UN, has said that she sees regime change in Syria as one of the Trump administration’s priorities in the country wracked by civil war.
Defeating Islamic State, pushing Iranian influence out of Syria, and the ousting of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad are priorities for Washington, Haley said in an interview on CNN’s State of the Union, which will air in full on Sunday.
“There’s not any sort of option where a political solution is going to happen with Assad at the head of the regime,” Haley said, while reiterating that defeating Isis was still the number one policy goal. “If you look at his actions, if you look at the situation, it’s going to be hard to see a government that’s peaceful and stable with Assad.”
“Regime change is something that we think is going to happen.”
The comments represented a departure from what Haley said before the United States hit a Syrian air base with 59 Tomahawk missiles on Thursday in retaliation for what it said was a chemical weapons attack by Assad’s forces on Syrian civilians.
President Donald Trump ordered the missile strike after watching television images of infants suffering from chemical weapons injuries.
“You pick and choose your battles and when we’re looking at this, it’s about changing up priorities and our priority is no longer to sit there and focus on getting Assad out,” Haley had told reporters on 30 March, just days before dozens of Syrian civilians died from chemical weapons injuries.
Haley’s latest comments jarred with remarks made by secretary of state Rex Tillerson, who said on Saturday that Washington’s first priority is the defeat of Isis.
Once the threat from Isis has been reduced or eliminated, “I think we can turn our attention directly to stabilising the situation in Syria,” Tillerson said in excerpts from an interview on CBSs Face the Nation, that will air in full on Sunday.
Tillerson said the United States is hopeful it can help bring parties together to begin the process of hammering out a political solution.
“If we can achieve ceasefires in zones of stabilisation in Syria, then I believe – we hope we will have the conditions to begin a useful political process,” Tillerson said.
Syrian forces launched further airstrikes on Saturday that killed 18 people including five children in rebel-controlled Idlib province, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the civil defence rescue service reported.
Reuters contributed to this report