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

Saturday, April 22, 2017

State, Policy Making & National Security


Colombo Telegraph
By Nipuli Gajanayake –April 22, 2017

Nipuli Gajanayake
The thirty Years War in Europe and the Civil War in England have symbolized historic reasons to derive the modern concept of national security in the 17th century. The concept of national security is emphasizing on protecting state and its citizens against internal and external threats. On the other hand, the Pact of Westphalia has established the political theory of sovereignty which indicates the supreme authority of a nation state. The convolution between a sovereign state and national security becomes salient elements in maintaining security and survival to its citizens within the state and in the mutable international system. Therefore, framing of national policy frameworks has parallelly become a crucial assignment of every government to prepare for unprecedented domestic and external threats and also for reduction of risks and threats. Therefore, the policymaking remains as an ‘imperative’ task of every government to make the state secure for its citizens to survive without any types of disturbances.
Understanding national security vulnerabilities are becoming important as a result of trending internal and external menaces to a nation state. Classically, such threats can simply categorize either as national and international or as traditional and non-traditional. By all the means of ‘national security’, is finally come to the focal point of ‘state survival’ and ‘citizen’s protection’. The Peace of Westphalia was able to implant the root to this prudent rationale by installing the notion of a nation state, which has sovereign control over both domestic and external security. Since then, nation states have been practising strategic security interests to maintain its peaceful and stable survival both in internal and external contexts through national policy frameworks. National policy frameworks emphasized on different aspects of national security. Mainly Political security, economic security, social security, human security, energy security, natural resources security and environmental security can identify. 
In this scenario, national policy frameworks like defence policy, economic policy, foreign policy, health policy, education policy, and environmental policy transpire as every government’s decisive factors to maintain internal and external security condition. On the other hand, national survival and citizen’s protection of a nation state relies on the promising security conditions that include in the above mentioned policy aspects. Therefore, national decision taking and policymaking process operate as a key mechanism in framing and implementing national policies. Moreover, nation states use these policies to represent the country and promote national interests abroad, while protecting national survival and national security. 
The relationship between the concept of globalization and the novel age of hyper-connectivity has set up nation states to welcome unprecedented challenges and threats. These unexpected conditions display the capabilities of state actor in facing and tackling domestic and external tough situations. On the other hand this reflects the practical utility of national policy frameworks of a country to stand as a strong nation. As an example Japan remained as a victim of more natural calamities because of its geographical localization. They face diverse types of natural disasters including tsunamisfloodstyphoonsearthquakescyclones and volcanic eruptions. Therefore, Japan Central Disaster Management Council which consists of the Prime Minister, Minister of State for Disaster Management, all ministers, heads of major public institutions and experts, handle planning and central coordination with regard to matters relating to basic policy on disaster risk reduction, and matters concerning disaster countermeasures in the event of a large-scale disaster. Moreover, in 2015 Japan Cabinet Office of Disaster Management published White Paper on Disaster Management to understand its disaster risk management policies. According to Ms. Margareta Wahlstrom, the Special Representative of the United Nations for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR) and Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction; “The White Paper on Disaster Management is one of Japan’s most noteworthy initiatives comprehensive reports on a regular basis. Other countries can learn from Japan’s example and adapt this model to their own needs.” Thus, the above mentioned factors prove that Japan policy measures have ultimately assisted to keep and maintain stable and secured state for its own people.

WILL SRI LANKAN FOREIGN MINISTER SAMARAWEERA GET AXED IN CABINET RESHUFFLE?


Sri Lanka Brief22/04/2017

Political sources in Colombo are buzzing with rumours of a possible cabinet reshuffle within the next two weeks.

President Sirisena told media on 20th April that he will change faces as well as systems in two weeks time to make governance more efficient. State media quoted Sirisena saying that “there will be major changes in position and a new face in government operations within two weeks.”

According to the sources close to the President, he has been wanting to replace the Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake for months. But strong resistance from the Prime Minister Wickremasinghe has prevented Minster Karunanayake being replaced. There is a widespread sentiment among the public that Minister Karunanayake has either allowed large scale corruption or has himself engaged in corrupt practices.

The major change that is being talked about in town is possibly of the removal of Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera. The pro human rights position he has taken at international forums including the UN Human Rights Council has irked the President, the same sources say. In a number of occasions, Sirisena has contradicted Foreign Minister Samaraweera’s statements on Transitional Justice process in Sri Lanka.

Sirisena has been tough on Non Government Organisations recently while Samaraweera has been friendly towards human rights NGO sector politically and personally.

Minister Samaraweera is one of the most senior members in the present cabinet. He held the same ministerial position briefly under President Mahinda Rajapaksa in 2005.

It is rumoured that Samaraweera will be given the Ministry of Finance, another crisis ridden sector in Sri Lanka government. He has reportedly stated that he is some one who does not even keep his own accounts properly and that finance is not his forte.

Political observers wonder what kind of changes may occur in Sri Lanka’s Foreign Policy if Samaraweera gets axed from the Foreign Affairs Ministry.

President Sirisena Show you are a leader

President Sirisena Show you are a leader

Apr 22, 2017

President Maithripala Sirisena on Thursday announced that he will carry out sweeping changes in the government, but stopped short of announcing a cabinet reshuffle. He told journalist that he would change the Chairmen and Secretaries who have performed very poorly.

On Dec 23, 2016 Lanka Voice Asia published the results of a survey of the 10 Worst Performing Ministries and the 10 worst performing Government Institutions for the year 2016. The intention of the survey was purely in the public interest. These ministries and Public institutions are run on public money and therefore they are accountable to the public. These people still continue unabated  Mr President see for yourself the list and do something before your Yahapalana supporters abandon you.
 Ministries
  •     Ministry of Development Strategies and International Trade
  •     Ministry of Megapolis and Western Province Development
  •     Ministry of  Law and Order
  •     Ministry of Justice 
  •     Ministry of Power and Renewable Energy
  •     Ministry of Resettlement
  •     Ministry of Ports and Shipping
  •     Ministry of Transport
  •     Ministry of Public Enterprise Development
  •     Ministry of Education
  •     Government Institutions
  •     Board of Investment (BOI)
  •     Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB)
  •     Employees Provident Fund (EPF)
  •     Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority
  •     Central Bank of Ceylon
  •     Export Development Board (EDB)
  •     Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka (SEC)
  •     Consumer Affairs Authority
  •     Airport and Aviation Services 
  •     Wild Life Department

Derana multiplies its offences ! ‘Derana deal’ report - Media secretary sends in reply….


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News-22.April2017, 11.45PM)  Lanka e news on the 18 th reported “Derana had put through a ‘deal’ with media minister and president; Good governance government had abjectly surrendered to the ‘illicit filthy lucre’ of Jayaweera”. It was revealed that following the investigation conducted against Derana , the latter had put  through a ‘deal’ with the president after  meeting with him, and the media ministry secretary was  intimated of this in writing by Derana .We are now n receipt of the reply sent by the media ministry secretary in response to the report. In his reply the secretary says , the answer provided by Derana cannot be accepted under any circumstances.

That reply states further, neither the president nor the minister in charge are contemplating an intervention to deliver  a judgment  . Hence by Derana distorting the  true picture by a written notification that they  are  intervening , has possibly committed yet another offence.
It has been pointed out , the relevant media personnel  by launching a vicious  attack targeting the media secretary in between the Derana Aruna program ,  has rendered  Derana which has already committed a wrong even more  guilty by multiplying its wrong already committed.   
According to this letter , the secretary has sent a copy thereof  to the SLT regulatory commission which says a decision is to be taken  in regard to Derana. Hence ,though a decision is to be taken against Derana , it has not been revealed yet , what  that is going to be. 
The view expressed by  senior media personnel and legal experts is , the license of Derana may be suspended for 3 months. They also indicated  , a wrong has been committed  which  could warrant a suspension of the license ,and under this government , there is no media suppression owing to that  . It  was the opinion of the majority  , if Derana does not respond duly , a suspension of license could be the result .
by     (2017-04-22 21:37:56)

Lake House To Sue ‘Aarakshakayo’: Page Taken Down But CID Inquiry Continues


Colombo Telegraph
April 22, 2017
The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd. (Lake House) is to be the first Sri Lankan company to resort to a law suit over potential financial losses caused by online abuse and fake news.
Kavan
The company lodged a complaint with the Criminal Investigations Department on Thursday against a defamatory Facebook page by the name of ‘Lake House Aaraksha Karanno’.
The Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) was entrusted with the task of offering technical assistance to the CID team handling the inquiry.
However, the derogatory Facebook page was taken down a day after the complaint to the CID was lodged.
Highly-placed Police sources told Colombo Telegraph that the inquiry will continue despite the page being taken down by its admin.
They added the investigation would be carried out based on scientific evidence and details provided by CERT.
A spokesman from the company who wished to remain anonymous said the company would resort to legal action, based on the the CID inquiry.
He said Colombo Telegraph’s revelation on the matter was one of the key reasons for the company to seek the assistance of the law enforcement authorities to investigate into the matter.
Colombo Telegraph is now in a position to reveal that the members of the CID team would visit Lake House early next week to gather information on the Facebook page and those who were behind it.
In the complaint, the Lake House management said the Facebook page caused a potential financial loss of over Rs. 200 million as it spread false information about the company and its business decision. The Lake House recorded a profit of Rs. 204 million during the last financial year and the management said the Facebook page was aimed at affecting the company’s profitability.
Colombo Telegraph exclusively reported that a derogatory Facebook page, allegedly run by a Director of the company, has created a heated situation among the members of the company’s senior management. Evidence has been found to suspect that a member of the Director board had written derogatory posts for the Facebook page by the name of ‘Lake House aaraksha karanno’.

Meetotamulla: Shameful failure, human tragedy


article_image


Meetotamulla children with national cricketer Rangana Herath in their temporary accommodation. (AFP photo by Ishara. S. Kodikara).

by Rajan Philips- 

The shame of Meetotamulla is that for 40 years successive Sri Lankan governments have not been able to find a location for an engineered, or sanitary, landfill to deposit Colombo’s garbage. Its tragedy is that people had to die because a makeshift mountain of garbage came crashing down on their dwellings. The problem, in its simplest formulation, is that Colombo has no place to bury its garbage and nobody else wants to bury Colombo’s garbage in their backyard. Underlying this simplicity are vested interests, identified as the ‘kunu mafia’, who want to keep making quick and dirty money hauling Colombo’s garbage to any open dump within the City. The mafia does not want Colombo’s garbage to leave Colombo. At the overarching level, our multiple layers of government cannot get their act together and find a burial place not just for Colombo’s garbage but for all the garbage generated in the entire Western Province.

இரக்கமற்ற செயலைச் செய்த இலங்கை கடற்படை வீரர் : கலங்கவைக்கும் புகைப்படம்


April 22, 2017
மனிதத்துவம் மிக்க நாடுகளின் பட்டியலில் இலங்கையும் ஓர் இடத்தினை தக்க வைத்துள்ளது.
என்றாலும் இன்றைய நிலையில் அந்த பட்டியலில் இலங்கை காணாமல் போய்விடக் கூடிய சாத்தியக் கூறு ஏற்பட்டு விடுமோ என்ற சந்தேகம் ஏற்பட்டுள்ளதாக விமர்சிக்கப்படுகின்றது.
இலங்கை கடற்படையைச் சேர்ந்த ஒருவர் நாய் ஒன்றினைப் பிடித்து அதனை உயிருடன் கடலில் வீசும் புகைப்படங்கள் வெளியானதன் காரணமாகவே இவ்வாறான விமர்சனங்கள் எழுப்பப்பட்டுள்ளது.
குறித்த புகைப்படங்கள் சமூக வலைத்தளங்களில் வைரலாக பரவி வருகின்றதோடு, மனிதம் அற்ற இவ்வாறான செயல்கள் கண்டிக்கப்படத்தக்கவை எனவும் கூறப்படுகின்றது.
அண்மையில் மீதொட்டமுல்ல குப்பைமேடு அனர்த்தத்தில் புதைந்த தன் எஜமானருக்காக நாற்கணக்கில் நாய் ஒன்று காத்திருக்கும் புகைப்படம் வெளியாகி இருந்தது.
ஆனால் இன்று உயிருடன் நாயை கடலில் வீசும் இலங்கையரின் புகைப்படங்கள் வெளிவந்துள்ளன.
இவை (சில) மனிதர்கள் நாயை விடவும் தாழ்ந்து நடந்து கொள்வதை காட்டுவதாக கூறப்படுகின்றது.
இவ்வாறான இரக்கமற்ற செயல்களில் ஈடுபடுவோர் மிருக வதைக் குற்றச்சாட்டில் கடுமையாக தண்டிக்கப்பட வேண்டும் எனவும் பல்வேறு கருத்துகள் கூறப்படுகின்றது.
Fighting corruption is good for Sri Lanka: British HC

2017-04-22
Making progress in the fight against corruption is good for Sri Lanka, for Sri Lankans and for Sri Lankan businesses, British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka James Dauris said.
Speaking on “Corporate Governance: staying ahead of the risk of corruption,” the High Commissioner said if corruption was tackled properly, it will be easier for Sri Lankan business to proper.
“Get it right, at least get it better, and it will be easier for Sri Lankan businesses to prosper, will help companies and country alike to attract investment, and will enhance the country’s international reputation,” he said.
He said he is proud of the work the High Commission has been doing, at the invitation of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe to share experience of tackling financial crime with practitioners in Sri Lanka.
“We have had colleagues from our Serious Fraud Office working in Colombo with local agencies, sharing expertise and providing training that we hope will help to lead to successful prosecutions,” he said.
The High Commissioner said in the 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index prepared by Transparency International, Sri Lanka is ranked 95 out of 175 countries, with a score of 36%.
“India is ranked 79 with a score of 40%. The report comments that the year’s results highlight the link between corruption and inequality. In turn, Transparency International assesses, the interplay between corruption and inequality feeds political populism,” he said.
He said the UK can’t and don’t claim to have beaten corruption but the country do take it seriously. “We take the fight against it seriously, and we demand that companies with links to the UK take it seriously,” he said.
In May 2016, the UK hosted the first Anti-Corruption Summit for heads of state and government – its purpose to step up global action to expose, punish and drive out corruption in all walks of life
“It was good to have President Maithripala Sirisena representing Sri Lanka at the Summit, at which he said that Sri Lanka would be working towards making the public service corruption-free at all levels, and addressing corruption within the private sector.
These are laudable goals. The recent passing of the Right to Information Act provides a useful tool to help advance these goals,” he said.
01
02logoFriday, 21 April 2017

At a recent panel discussion on ITN television themed ‘Mountains of garbage’ where the writer was a panellist, S.M. Marikkar, MP for Colombo District, brought a file with copies of communications from him to authorities regarding the Meethotamulla garbage dump. The list of institutions and individuals to whom the letters were addressed epitomised the breadth of the blame assigning involved. 

Meetotamulla and the Seeds of Things


article_image
by Tisaranee Gunasekara- 




"It’s not that we decided to house ourselves near a garbage dump, but it was they who decided to dump garbage near our houses." 
Nuwan Bopage (Daily Mirror – 17.4.2017)

In 1979, residents of Northwood Manor in Texas, USA, sought judicial intervention to prevent the creation of a garbage dump in their neighbourhood. The court agreed that the dump would do irreparable harm to the residents by affecting "the entire nature of the community, its land values, its tax base, its aesthetics, the health and safety of its inhabitants..."i However the residents were not granted the relief they sought. The case was filed under the Civil Rights Act and the court ruled that the residents had failed to prove adequately the existence of discrimination.
Khuram Shaikh was ‘stabbed 40 times with broken bottles’
Khuram Shaikh was ‘stabbed 40 times with broken bottles’

logoApril 22, 2017

An aid worker from Greater Manchester who was killed in Sri Lanka was shot and stabbed more than 40 times with broken bottles, an inquest has heard.

Red Cross worker Khuram Shaikh, 32, from Rochdale, was attacked at a hotel while on holiday in Sri Lanka on Christmas Day in 2011.

A witness, giving evidence for the first time, said when he was attacked it was as if he was being “targeted”.

The inquest in Heywood recorded a conclusion of unlawful killing.

Sri Lankan politician Sampath Vidanapathirana was jailed for 20 years for killing Mr Shaikh in July 2014.

Lahiru Kelum, U. Sama Deshapriya and Praneeth Chathuranga were also convicted of Mr Shaikh’s killing.

Mr Shaikh had been working in Gaza fitting prosthetic limbs, but was holidaying in the resort of Tangalle when he was killed while trying to break up a fight involving the men and a hotel worker.

His girlfriend was also attacked, but she survived.

The trial had been delayed for over two years amid allegations of interference because of Vidanapathirana’s political connections, but there was pressure from the UK government for the trial to go ahead.

A number of witnesses did not give evidence at the trial, one of which was Canadian Christopher Stookesberry.

Speaking via Skype, he told the inquest before the attack the women in his group had complained about the group of local men being insulting towards them.

He described them as “grabby” as they tried to grope and make passes at some of the women.

He said when Mr Shaikh was attacked it was as if he was being “targeted” directly as if he had spoken to the men earlier in the evening.

Later that evening he heard gunshots and went to his bedroom in the hotel.

He said from the balcony he could see Mr Shaikh and his girlfriend being attacked with broken bottles.
Source: BBC

-Agencies

Son-in-law’s company in bond auction again

April 22, 2017

The controversial Perpetual Treasuries that was involved in the bond scam of eh Central Bank of Sri Lanka has come forward to buy bonds once again say reports.

The company has come forward for the Rs.29,500 million treasury bills auction and has bid for Rs. 2,206,123.

Perpetual Treasuries belongs to the son-in-law of Arjun Mahendran, former Governor of Central Bank during whose term the controversial bond dealings took place.

The Central Bank states Perpetual Treasuries could bid as it had not been banned from carrying out any transactions.
press4

Historians say the March for Science is ‘pretty unprecedented’


Tens of thousands of scientists and their allies are expected to demonstrate in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, with hundreds of additional satellite marches planned to boot.

Organizers insist the march is simply calling for “political leaders and policymakers to enact evidence-based policies in the public interest.” And yet the sentiments driving it could perhaps only have emerged in the Trump administration: A concern about valid information itself and its role in public policy, combined with deep fear about the fate of federal science budgets, which Trump has targeted for sweeping cuts.
There have, to be sure, been countless past flare-ups at the interface of science, politics, and society. And yet they’ve rarely been so mobilizing for the research world.

“The march is pretty unprecedented in terms of the scale and breadth of the scientific community that’s involved, and it does recall Physicians for Social Responsibility and various scientific groups against nuclear war in the Reagan era, that’s I think the most recent precedent,” said Robert Proctor, a professor of the history of science at Stanford University. “But this is even broader in the sense that there’s a broader perception of a massive attack on sacred notions of truth that are sacred to the scientific community.”

“The current concerns, and let’s say movement, on the parts of many, many scientists and other citizens — and the movements of the current administration — those really do feel pretty unusual,” added David Kaiser, a historian of science at MIT. “And if they’re not completely brand new under the sun, they do feel like a pretty big swing.”

Proctor, Kaiser, and two other historians of science reached for this article cited many partial past analogues for what’s happening in the world of U.S. science right now. But they also noted ways in which the present moment seems distinct. The main reason: While scientists and their allies have argued about and even occasionally protested on specific political topics over the years, taking to the streets in a sweeping defense of scientific truth itself and its role in policymaking seems considerably broader and, for the research world, more fundamental.

Bill Nye, “The Science Guy,” serves as an honorary co-chair for the March for Science taking place on April 22 on the National Mall and will also be speaking at the rally. (The Washington Post)

It certainly isn’t news that scientific knowledge is politically potent and tends to get under people’s skin. Many of history’s most important scientists — Galileo, Darwin — clashed with authorities or the dominant cultures of their time.

Nor is it surprising to find that individual scientists can have strong opinions. Albert Einstein took up countless causes in his life, from pacifism to civil rights. Carl Sagan was another celebrity scientist who stood up for many political positions, and especially arms control and resistance to Ronald Reagan’s “Star Wars” program.

The current march, however, is best understood as a key moment in the U.S.’s government’s special relationship with science that began during World War II, and especially after the Soviet launch of Sputnik.

During this era, scientists became deeply attached to the federal government. They helped win wars through military and weapons research. They advised presidents. They also got used to receiving large amounts of public money for more basic and nonclassified research. Meanwhile, an administrative state grew up that relies on technical expertise, not only employing large numbers of scientists directly but also seating them in many formal advisory roles.

In this modern era, there was often friction between science and the American state. There were an unending string of controversies over environmental science (acid rain, ozone depletion, climate change), certain types of biomedical research (fetal tissue, embryonic stem cells), and more. And there were many controversies centered around scientific funding choices as well (Google “Superconducting Super Collider”).

But what’s different about the March for Science and the movement it seems to entail is that it is expressing concern about this modern science-politics relationship in a comprehensive way, rather than on individual issues.

And that corresponds to the Trump administration itself, which has come out of the gates by posing deep challenges to the traditional relationship that scientists have had with their government. Trump is proposing sweeping science budget cuts, even as he’s also raising concerns about the scientific advisory apparatus — the place of scientists in decision-making — by failing to name appointments to leading government scientific and public health positions and aiming cuts at advisory bodies like the EPA’s Science Advisory Board.

And that, in turn, has triggered the sharp scientist response.

“There’s different ways scientists have expressed opposition,” said Harvard science historian Naomi Oreskes. “In history, taking to the streets is kind of viewed as a last resort, it’s not the thing that most scientists would go to first.”

Still, there are notable past examples. Perhaps one of the biggest involved arms control and nuclear weapons, where a large scale political and protest movement reserved a special place for scientists and especially physicists, who had not only originally created the bomb but were in a special position to provide technical critiques of arms policies.

“Arms control is the obvious analogy,” said Oreskes. “And I think it’s the only one that’s really comparable in the sense of scientists not just speaking privately in corridors of power, but taking to the streets. Becoming active in the way that people are doing now.”

In a popular sense, this movement was larger than the March for Science. To give just one example, in 1982, hundreds of thousands of people — perhaps close to a million — attended an antinuclear rally in New York’s Central Park. Obviously, not all of those were scientists, but scientists were central to this movement.

In terms of protests, MIT’s Kaiser sees another example from the past worth comparing: Demonstrations that began on college campuses in the late 1960s, closely tied to the antiwar protest movement, that challenged whether universities and scientists should be taking research dollars from the Pentagon.

“It was about the role of the defense agencies in funding basic research,” said Kaiser. “It wasn’t only the physicists ….It was a fairly broad based coalition that had a lot of passion and a lot of buy-in from students and faculty across many fields of study.” That movement, he points out, was closely tied to the founding of the Union of Concerned Scientists, perhaps the most influential nonprofit and advocacy group operating at the science-politics intersection.

If you look to other countries, meanwhile, you find other relevant examples. In the 1980s in the UK, a group named “Save British Science” sprang up in the face of deep research spending cuts enacted by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the context of a recession.

“Thatcher was quite consistent in her view that all sections of public expenditure should take their share of the burden of cutting public expenditure to meet the recession, and so she cut funding for the research councils, the equivalent of the NSF and the NIH,” said John Durant, a science historian and director of the MIT Museum. “And this caused something close to panic in the scientific community in the UK.” But Durant says the big difference today is that the current movement has a “populist” streak — after all, it’s centered on marching. The British scientists, in contrast, started with a newspaper advertisement.

Still, there are notable past examples. Perhaps one of the biggest involved arms control and nuclear weapons, where a large scale political and protest movement reserved a special place for scientists and especially physicists, who had not only originally created the bomb but were in a special position to provide technical critiques of arms policies.

“Arms control is the obvious analogy,” said Oreskes. “And I think it’s the only one that’s really comparable in the sense of scientists not just speaking privately in corridors of power, but taking to the streets. Becoming active in the way that people are doing now.”

In a popular sense, this movement was larger than the March for Science. To give just one example, in 1982, hundreds of thousands of people — perhaps close to a million — attended an antinuclear rally in New York’s Central Park. Obviously, not all of those were scientists, but scientists were central to this movement.

In terms of protests, MIT’s Kaiser sees another example from the past worth comparing: Demonstrations that began on college campuses in the late 1960s, closely tied to the antiwar protest movement, that challenged whether universities and scientists should be taking research dollars from the Pentagon.

“It was about the role of the defense agencies in funding basic research,” said Kaiser. “It wasn’t only the physicists ….It was a fairly broad based coalition that had a lot of passion and a lot of buy-in from students and faculty across many fields of study.” That movement, he points out, was closely tied to the founding of the Union of Concerned Scientists, perhaps the most influential nonprofit and advocacy group operating at the science-politics intersection.

If you look to other countries, meanwhile, you find other relevant examples. In the 1980s in the UK, a group named “Save British Science” sprang up in the face of deep research spending cuts enacted by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the context of a recession.

“Thatcher was quite consistent in her view that all sections of public expenditure should take their share of the burden of cutting public expenditure to meet the recession, and so she cut funding for the research councils, the equivalent of the NSF and the NIH,” said John Durant, a science historian and director of the MIT Museum. “And this caused something close to panic in the scientific community in the UK.” But Durant says the big difference today is that the current movement has a “populist” streak — after all, it’s centered on marching. The British scientists, in contrast, started with a newspaper advertisement.

Palestinians hurt in West Bank clashes after settlers attack with stones

Wave of Jewish nationalist-motivated hate crimes target Palestinians and their property, as well Muslim and Christian holy sites

Palestinian uses slingshot to hurl stones towards Israeli security forces in recent clash (AFP)

Saturday 22 April 2017
At least five Palestinians were wounded on Saturday after residents of a hardline Israeli settlement attacked villages in the occupied West Bank south of Nablus, medical sources said.
The Palestinian medical sources said dozens of residents from the hardline settlement of Yitzhar went to the neighbouring village of Urif and threw stones at residents, who responded in kind.
The incident started when settlers from Yitzhar attacked Palestinian homes on the eastern side of the village, Palestinian officials told the Haaretz daily.
For years, there has been a wave of "price tag" attacks - a euphemism for Jewish nationalist-motivated hate crimes targeting Palestinians and Palestinian Israelis and their property, as well Muslim and Christian holy sites.
Ghassan Douglas, director of the Palestinian Authority’s settlement department, told Haaretz more than 100 settlers were involved in the attack on Urif’s Palestinian residents.
The army confirmed the clashes and said when soldiers arrived to separate the two sides they were attacked by Palestinians and used anti-riot measures to disperse them.
Israel’s Channel 10 said the Palestinians villagers shot firecrackers and threw stones at the security forces and settlers.
According to Douglas, four Palestinians were injured by rubber-coated bullets during the dispersal, the Times of Israel reported.
The medical sources added that later, settlers attacked Palestinians in Hawara village, also south of Nablus, wounding one person.