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

Friday, May 5, 2017

JVP and Padeniyas while staging strike imperiling lives of patients fill their pockets via private practice : Ranjan’s receipt exposes all ! (Video)


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 05.April.2017, 10.20PM) The shameless and villainous motives which drive the Padeniyas and the JVP to stage  strikes were exposed well and thoroughly by Ranjan Ramanayake before the people with evidence! Padeniya the president of the GMOA that was staging the strike was caught red handed . 
It was proved beyond any doubt  that the hypocritical , cruel and unscrupulous doctors of Padeniya’s GMOA  despite having taken the sacred oath of Hippocrates  were engaged in private channeling practice in hospitals  to earn filthy lucre even today – the day of the strike organized by themselves.  
Herein is a receipt issued by Nawaloka hospital to a patient fixing an  appointment at 4.05 p.m.  to consult Dr. Padeniya today (05) . The patient Ranjan Ramanayake has obtained this appointment at about 10.30 p.m. yesterday .
The channeling charges of Doctor monster  Padeniya as per the receipt is Rs. 1000.00 ; hospital charges is Rs. 500.00; VAT levy is Rs. 150.00; Booking charges is Rs. 275.00 ; the total fee is Rs. 1925.00 which was paid by the patient. 
When Ranjan Ramanayake was booking his appointment , he was the sixth patient in the list of Dr. ‘Avaricious duplicitous’  Padeniya the notorious Dr. Killer  who was putting  the lives of innocent patients in government hospitals in dire  jeopardy while giving priority to his selfish private practice earnings. 
Padeniya’s  GMOA leaders said the strike will be from today (morning) until tomorrow morning, and loudly announced they would not even engage in private channeling  during that period. Hence ,this receipt given to the patient proves Padeniyas have no sincere motive or agenda in their strikes , for while crippling the government health services after  getting  paid by the government too , they are chasing after pelf for selfish reasons  through private practice compromising national interests, and precious lives of patients .
 
Following the exposure of  Dr. monster Padeniya the duplicitous medical practitioner by Ranjan Ramanayake via his face book  , Padeniya has got jittery, phoned Nawaloka  hospital, and cancelled all appointments today. So this is the so called ‘patriotic minded’ avaricious duplicitous Padeniya who is showing great concern for the medical education of Sri Lanka , and staging strikes against SAITM private medical College . 
Believe it or not , when Ranjan Ramanayake was holding a media discussion this noon , Nawaloka hospital had phoned him in a panic at about 11.30 a.m. and informed  , Padeniya has cancelled all his appointments today . Ranjan allowed this phone  call  to be heard by the media participants .The caller said , just about 10 minutes earlier  Padeniya gave that instruction.
Meanwhile this rascally behavior of the scoundrel Padeniya was discussed in Parliament , and the receipt of Ranjan was tabled. The JVP M.P. Bimal Ratnayake who is a sleeping partner of Padeniyas , like the pariah dogs on pavements  having no answer to give in defense alleged in a rage that the  receipt of Ranjan was counterfeit. Nevertheless Ranjan had concrete proof that he had made payment through his credit card. 
The receipt of Ranjan which stripped nude the rascally rapacious Padeniyas and the JVP , and how patients are being killed through unjust strikes ,duping the people and committing treason is herein . The video footage as follows 


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by     (2017-05-05 17:22:35)

Mahinda’s security men questioned on Thajudeen’s murder

DIG-Anura-Senanayake
May 5, 2017
The head and six members of the group of soldiers that had been deployed for the security of former President and his family members have been extensively questioned regarding an incident in which pages of notes maintained by Presidential Security Division had been removed. It is alleged that pages of records kept on the day popular rugby player Thajudeen was murdered and 14 adjacent days had been removed. The CID in a report informed this to Court when the Thajudeen murder case was heard before Colombo Additional Magistrate Jeyaram Trotksy yesterday (4th).
Former Senior DIG Anura Senanayaka who has been remanded in connection with the murder had been brought to Court and was re-remanded till 18th of this month.
Probe on FCID following complaints to PM, President




2017-05-05

The Inspector General of Police (IGP) and the Secretary to the Ministry of Law and Order have begun an inquiry into the activities of the Police Financial Crimes Investigation Division (FCID). 

Sources close to the Prime Minister said the inquiry had been had been launched after a series of complaints were received by both the Premier and President Maithripala Sirisena against the FCID.

 The objective of the investigation is to determine whether these complaints were valid and whether anyone was bringing any undue influence to bear on the FCID which could compromise its actions.

 The report on the investigation was due to be made available in approximately fifteen days, according to sources. (Yohan Perera)


SRI LANKA’S EX-FIRST LADY SPENT MILLIONS TO WATCH VESAK IN PARIS


Image may contain: 3 people
Image: Shiranthi Rajapaksa in Paris.

Sri Lanka Brief05/05/2017

Sri Lanka’s former first lady, Shiranthi Rajapaksa, spent 25 million rupees to watch Vesak, the biggest Buddhist festival in Paris while packing in a pilgrimage to Lourdes, a beloved shrine of the Catholics.

She was representing Sri Lanka at the 2014 Vesak celebrations organised by the UNESCO in France and stayed in a super luxury hotel which charged 2,000 euro a night for the room only. She spent three nights there, Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera told parliament.

“King George the Fifth had stayed in this hotel, but Queen Elizabeth does not stay in this hotel because it is too expensive for her,” Samaraweera said. “But for our queen, the cost is not a problem.”

He disclosed accounts of the visit of the former first lady who was also accompanied by her aunty, Daisy, who recently shot to fame after Yoshitha Rajapaksa claimed she had gifted him a multi-million rupee palatial home in Mount Lavinia.

Aunty Daisy and the first lady also used the mini bars in their rooms extensively, according to the bills submitted to the Sri Lankan embassy in Paris, the minister said. The drinks had to be replenished thrice during their stay which cost a total of 25 million rupees to Sri Lankan tax payers, the minister added. (COLOMBO, May 5, 2017)
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India-Sri Lanka coastal belt turning into a smuggling ground?

Indian Custom's official have caught 5kg of gold which was smuggled from Sri Lanka to India.

Smuggled gold


Akshaya Nath | Edited by Sanjay Nirala- May 4, 2017
The region between northern Sri Lanka and Rameshwaram has been a subject of intense activities with regular arrests made by both the sides. With Indian fishermen not venturing into the sea for 60 days, the regular fishermen arrests have come down, but today the Indian Custom's official have caught 5kg of gold which was smuggled from Sri Lanka to India.
The Customs officials said that an investigation is underway and they will soon be getting hold of a racket that has been smuggling goods into the two countries. Apart from this, a suspect was apprehended with over 1 kg of heroin by a group of Naval personnel attached to the Sri Lanka Coast Guard in coordination with Kotawila Police. The apprehended suspect and heroin were handed over to the Kotawila Police for further investigations.
With the Indian Coast Guards hovercraft getting damaged, it is seen that there is an alleged difficulty in the patrolling and this has further increased the presence of smugglers in the region.

The fishing ban period already kicking in is seen that the regular arrests of fishermen that usually take place has come down. The arrest of five fishermen a few days back though has caused a lot of protest across the fishing community in the state. Apart from the arrests of Indian fishermen, close to 140 boats have been kept under the Sri Lankan custody and getting them back has been a regular demand of the Indian fishermen.
With Prime Minister Narendra Modi visiting Sri Lanka on 11th of May it has been announced that there will be release of the boats as a goodwill gesture.
While this has brought in some relief for the fishermen, the region becoming a smuggling ground is causing a lot of fear and unhappiness.

01
logoFriday, 5 May 2017

In an article published as early as 1992, Jim L. Bowyer, professor of forestry at the University of Wisconsin pleaded for responsible environmentalism. He described responsible environmentalism essentially as “paying attention to human needs, including the need for materials, as part of any environmental action”. He was responding to the agitations by environmentalists at that time against the logging of forests to make paper. He pointed out that even with 100% recycling, US still needed to cut down more forests to meet its demand for paper.

These views were expressed way before China, India and Indonesia and other countries in South East Asia brought in three billion or more of people to the global economy. With their eagerness to get out of poverty and consume more adequate quantities of goods and services, this population has put additional pressure on the environment. The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) declared by United Nations in September 2015 is largely a recognition of the need to end poverty and ensure prosperity to the billions of poor while protecting the planet.

Solid waste management is an area where environmental protection issues meet face to face with economic development issues. As I argue later, plastics and polythene are instrumental in bringing modern conveniences to the poor and promoting their well-being, yet, plastics and polythene have become the more visible side of solid waste management crises everywhere. The result is knee-jerk reactions by policy makers to ban such conveniences as cheap lunch sheets and plastic water bottles.

Banning is too easy, but it is a sledgehammer tool which can hurt economic activity across the board. It is harder to design market mechanisms to control the use, but such measures can be more effective and less damaging. Thoughtless banning is what I would call irresponsible environmentalism. Effort to balance the economic and social needs of the people with environmental consideration is responsible environmentalism.

How do we practice responsible environmentalism in solid waste management? In this column I explore a few options.

Avoid blatantly irresponsible behaviour

Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore, now labelled as an eco-traitor for his anti-Greenpeace views, says that too much of today’s “pop-environmentalism” is filled with sensationalism, misinformation, and fear. As I detailed in my previous article ‘Meethotamulla disaster – Assigning the blame correctly’ (http://www.ft.lk/article/610368/Meethotamulla--Assigning-the-blame-correctly) such sensationalism is exactly what happened in the solid waste management discourse beginning in nineties in Sri Lanka.

Our environmental activists demanded 100% recycling when even Sweden the current exemplar in waste management was sending more than a quarter of its waste into landfills in the 90s. Today USA and UK still send close 50% of their household waste into landfills. Through their agitations, our environmentalists together with ‘oppose everything to death when in opposition” shot down proposals for sanitary landfills in Padukka and several other places. A sanitary landfill at Dompe was constructed finally, but it is hardly used. Meanwhile mountains of waste were gathered in populated area such as Meethotamulla killing 30+ innocent people.

Another case of irresponsible environmentalism is the shooting down of an initiative by the Ministry of Environment and supermarkets to reduce use of plastic shopping bag through user fees. As the media reported in 2009:

“Sri Lanka’s top supermarket chains, with the environmental ministry, announced earlier in the year at a ceremony, that they are charging for plastic carrier bags to discourage their use. But a three judge Supreme Court bench Monday struck down the move and directed Sri Lanka’s consumer authority to issue a directive within a week banning supermarkets and other retailers from charging for carrier bags given to shoppers. Court also directed supermarkets to give bio degradable alternatives if plastic bags were considered environmentally harmful. Liyanagamage Ariyapala, a resident of Kottegoda, has taken the issue to court supported by lawyer Sudath Jayasundera. Ariyapala told court in his plaint that the environmental ministry had banned the use of polythene bags of a certain thickness but no authority had been granted for supermarkets to charge for plastic bags. Ariyapala said with an escalating cost of living it was impossible for a consumer to pay additional amounts for bags which were previously given free, and the new practice simply enriched the coffers of supermarkets. Ariyapala said if plastic bags were considered environmentally harmful, retailers had a duty to provide environmentally friendly bags. [Lanka Business Online, 13 Oct 2008]”

I think it was environmentally irresponsible to demand environmentally-friendly bags when the utility of such bags are yet to be proven and they could have been unaffordable to a country at our stage of development. The responsible thing would have been to request for an amendment to the Consumer Act allowing the charging of fees if such levies are directed towards a public interest purpose related to the product, or something to that effect.

Do not ask the poor to reduce their consumption

02It pains me to hear public intellectuals or politicians and officials sitting in the comfort of air-conditioned offices talking about back-to-nature lifestyles free of plastics. They wonder why people chose a cheap one hundred rupee item which could breakdown in a short time over a three hundred rupee item with a longer life. In which planet do these people live? When you earn 1000 rupees per day, the choice is 100 rupee purchase with whatever longevity or no purchase at all.

For example take the ubiquity of plastic furniture. These plastic furniture has enabled families to sit around a table and eat together even in the poorest homes. This furniture may last a maximum of 10 years, but they are better than the alternative wood products which are out of the reach of the poor. Wood products also means cutting down of more trees.

Another case is the use of shampoos for hair care. A bottle of shampoo at a minimum cost of 200-300 rupees is out of the reach of a daily wage earner, but the availability of smaller sachets of shampoo at rupees 20 or so makes it possible for young women from such families to purchase shampoo as needed per wash. More solid waste but more fulfilment for a large group of people.

The much-maligned lunch sheet is another case. These sheets are a saviour for the poor but frowned upon by others for whom other options are viable. Think of somebody leaving home at four in the morning to get to work in Colombo. In the old days the wife would get up at and cook and wrap food for the day. Today a ‘buth’ packet is available for a reasonable price from anywhere and the wife does not have to wake up at three in the morning. These small conveniences do not make a consumer society. They are consumptions that lift people out of poverty and ensure their well-being and happiness.

Stop banning just because one can

The easiest thing in the world is to ban a product. But bans are often difficult to implement, in particular if the user needs are left out in the policy making. Consider the following time line of the polythene sheet ban:

2006: Gazette notification No. 1466/5 banning the manufacturing or sale of polythene or any polythene product of twenty (20) microns or below in thickness

2009: Government makes labelling compulsory for polythene products with effect from 15 August

2015: Government spokesman says polythene ban would be strictly enforced

2017: Laws continue to be ignored

Laws are ignored rightly I would say, because these laws are driven by irresponsible environmentalism. These laws have been drafted without any cost benefit analysis or feasibility of implementation. Are there sufficient inspectors to monitor? Do they have the right equipment? Even if 20 micron gauge polythene is used at higher expense, what assurance do we have that they too will not end up in garbage dumps?

Recycling success of polythene is highly sensitive to world oil prices. Oil price fluctuations affect the market because low oil prices would flood the market with virgin polymers. Proper labelling of different types of plastics is also is an issue in developing countries. Would it not be more prudent to allow people to use cheap plastics, but bale the used plastics for future use in waste to energy plants?

As a Pennsylvania State University document (http://kemp.wisc.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/59/2015/08/HRLBBowyer1992.pdf) points out, plastic waste that were buried in landfills years ago can be excavated and incinerated in a process known as landfill reclamation. Has the Government looked at these alternative scenarios at all? 

Provide landfilling and other final disposal facilities

In solid waste management, as in most other enterprises involving unpleasant material, we need to begin with the end in mind. The final disposal of solid waste involves two basic steps: Recycling and landfilling.

To keep the discussion simple, I define recycling broadly to include (1) recycling of plastic, paper, polythene metal, etc. into materials that are close to the original in their chemical composition and (2) converting waste to materials such as compost, bio-gas or energy where the product is very different from the original, physically or chemically.

What cannot be recycled has to be landfilled properly in what we call sanitary landfills. Contrary to emotional responses from some environmentalists, human have always produced material that cannot be reused or recycled. Broken crockery or clay items that serve as markers of ancient civilisations are some examples.

Before a municipality starts collecting food waste separately it should have a designated composting facility, bio-gas facility or waste to energy facility to handle the collected waste. If paper or plastic is collected separately, recyclers should be available to handle each type of collected waste.

Even policies to regulate materials have to be done with full set of implications in mind. Before the Central Environment Authority tries to re-impose the ban on thin polythene sheets, they should check for the availability of facilities to recycle 20 mm gauge polythene. Or all polythene thin or thick will end up in landfills. 

Enable market mechanisms to dissuade landfilling

If we are serious about reducing polythene use we should begin with places where carrots and sticks can be applied. One clear instance where sticks worked is when supermarkets charged five rupees per grocery bag. As we learned then, use of plastic grocery carry bags decreased by more than 50% during the few weeks the charge was operative. A change to the Consumer Act as proposed before should be priority in future solid waste management strategies. 

Pursue waste to energy options

There was a time when the release of dioxins and other highly-toxic chemicals was a problem in waste-to-energy operations. Today waste-to-energy processes have improved vastly and many countries are adopting these.

In Sri Lanka such projects were on the drawing board for years. It is gratifying that present Government has finally signed on two contracts awarding the processing of 500MT in Karadiyana (down Borupana Road in Ratmalana) and 400 MT at Muthurajawela with commitments by the Government to buy electricity from them at Rs. 36 per KWH. 

Allow civil society to monitor

The devil’s in the detail as they say. The waste-to-energy options need careful study by groups with no stake in the outcome. Corruption seems to be ingrained in the political culture in such opaque ways that we cannot tell an honest politician apart from a dishonest one anymore.

‘Responsible’ environmental-activists and other civic groups have to be involved not only to assure transparency in the procurement process for these waste-to-energy and other large contracts, but also ensure that regulatory frameworks are in place and lethargy does not delay these projects. The involvement of such oversight groups should be mandated for solid waste infrastructure projects, the regulatory processes and the management processes at the local authorities.

Marx at 199

( May 5, 2017, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Marx was born on May 5, 1818, in the city of Trier on the Moselle, close to what was then the French frontier, born to a lawyer. He could have become a lawyer or a university professor, but he became active as a writer, championing the cause of the agricultural workers and small farmers in the Rhineland in their fight against the land-owners. He died an exile in London (on March 14th, 1883,) after he had been forced to flee from Cologne, Paris, and Brussels to escape the persecution of the ruling powers of the day. Karl Marx has been variously described as an economist, philosopher, historian, sociologist and revolutionary.
Unlike many other thinkers, Marx’s core fundamental theories remain valid. The endless stream of books to prove that Marx was wrong is a sign of respect to Marx in showing how his writings still demonstrate insight and continue to inspire. They have all claimed to prove Marxian theories incorrect and outdated, but events have been against them. Marx’s labour theory of value and his materialist conception of history have been vindicated again and again. Marx bore witness to the old saying that the pen is mightier than the sword. He offered the working class the knowledge to establish a class-free society. The world socialist movement is indebted to Marx for two important discoveries—the materialist conception of history, and the source of surplus value. Because of this, his name will be remembered long after his revilers have perished. They have all claimed to prove Marxian theories incorrect and outdated, but events have been against them. Marx’s labour theory of value and his materialist conception of history have been vindicated again and again.
Marx continues to remain relevant after 199 years because his ideas appear in every form of struggle against exploitation, oppression, and injustice by the ruling classes in every part of the world. Yet, when praising Marx, we should not overlook the fact that he built upon the work of his predecessors. Marx had already obtained a storehouse of information from English economists, Utopian Socialists and German philosophers.
Marx held that, on every count, political action was the “first duty” of the working class. Marx thought that the working class should use the state to abolish capitalism, but this was to be a temporary affair leading fairly rapidly to the dismantling of the state and the establishment of a state-free socialist society. Marx adhered to the principle that “the emancipation of the working class must be the work of the working class itself”. So do we (it is incorporated into our Declaration of Principles.) Marx’s studies led to the conclusion that capitalism had brought into being a class that would be able to free itself from exploitation without having to rely on leaders to do it for them. “We cannot therefore co-operate”, said Marx, in a criticism of Leninism before its time “with people who openly state that the workers are too uneducated to emancipate themselves and must first be freed from above”
Karl Marx died and is sent to Hell.
Three days later, the Devil, desperate, telephones Saint Peter, begging for an exchange.
“This one here has already unionised all the demons, nobody is working. I can’t carry on like this!”
So they made the exchange and two days afterwards, the Devil telephones again to see how things were going.
“So then? How is God getting on with that Marx ?”
“God ??” answered Saint Peter. “He doesn’t exist!”

Pakistani, Afghan troops exchange fire on border, several killed

Relatives move a boy who was injured during border clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan forces on the border area, at a hospital in Chaman, Pakistan, May 5, 2017. REUTERS/Saeed Ali Achakzai
A man who was injured during exchange of fire between Pakistan and Afghan forces on the border area recieves treatment after he was brought to a hospital in Chaman, Pakistan, May 5, 2017. REUTERS/Saeed Ali Achakzai

By Gul Yousafzai | QUETTA, PAKISTAN-Fri May 5, 2017

Pakistani and Afghan troops exchanged fire for several hours on Friday along their disputed border, officials on both sides said, as tension between the neighbours flared into deadly violence.

Pakistan's military said a census team - guarded by troops from its Frontier Corps (FC) - that was collecting population data in a village near the border town of Chaman came under fire and at least one person was killed and 18 wounded.

Zia Durani, police spokesman for Afghanistan's Kandahar province, said Pakistani officials were using the census as a cover for "malicious activities and to provoke villagers against the government".

"They did not heed the warning and we have clear orders to engage them," Durani said, adding two Afghan border police were wounded.

Kandahar police chief General Abdul Raziq said 40 Pakistani soldiers and 37 others were killed, including 14 Afghan border police. Reuters was unable to confirm the figures.

Violence ceased later in the day and officials from both sides were due to meet at the frontier, the Pakistani military said. Pakistan's foreign ministry summoned the Afghan charge d’affaires to protest at what it called unprovoked firing.

The Chaman crossing into Afghanistan's Kandahar province is one of two border points. A doctor in a Chaman hospital told Reuters three people had been killed in the fighting.

Relations between the countries have been uneasy since Pakistan's independence in 1947. Afghanistan has traditionally enjoyed better ties with Pakistan's rival, India.

Afghanistan has for years accused Pakistan of sheltering Afghan Taliban militants, something Pakistan denies.

Pakistan's military said Afghan border police had been "creating hurdles" since April 30 for the census team in the Chaman area.

"This was done despite the fact that Afghan authorities had been informed well in advance and coordination was carried out through diplomatic and military channels for conduct of the census," the military said.

Tension has been increasing in recent months with each side accusing the other of not doing enough to stop militants engaging in cross-border raids.

Last year, Pakistan started building a barrier at the main border crossing in the town of Torkham, near the Khyber Pass, angering Afghanistan which has never formally recognised the colonial-era Durand Line border drawn up in 1893.

(Additional reporting by Syed Raza Hassan in Karachi and Hamid Shalizi in Kabul; Writing by Drazen Jorgic; Editing by Robert Birsel and Robin Pomeroy)

Trump-Russia investigation reignites as Senate asks aides to hand over notes

Senators asked Carter Page, a former Trump foreign policy adviser, to provide a list of files on any dealings with Russian officials or business representatives

The Senate committee letters are one of several signs that investigations were regaining speed after concerns were raised that Republicans were trying to stifle them. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

 in Washington-Friday 5 May 2017

A Senate committee has asked Trump campaign aides to hand over notes and records from meetings with Russian officials and businesses, as congressional investigations between the president’s associates and Moscow appear to regain momentum.

In a letter to Carter Page, a former Trump foreign policy adviser, dated 28 April, the Republican and Democratic leadership of the Senate intelligence committee asked him to attend a closed hearing and provide a list of documents on any dealings with “any Russian official or representative of Russian business interests” between June 2015 and January this year.

In a letter to Carter Page, a former Trump foreign policy adviser, dated 28 April, the Republican and Democratic leadership of the Senate intelligence committee asked him to attend a closed hearing and provide a list of documents on any dealings with “any Russian official or representative of Russian business interests” between June 2015 and January this year.

Similar letters are reported to have gone to several other figures in Trump’s circle, including an informal adviser, Roger Stone, according to the New York Times.

On Friday, Burr and his Democratic counterpart, Mark Warner, warned Page that if he did not submit the relevant documents by next Tuesday, the committee would “consider its next steps at that time”, an apparent threat of subpoena.

In a grudging reply to the Senate seen by the Guardian, Page said he would try to comply with the committee’s “request for even more irrelevant data”.

“As previously noted, I remain committed to helping the Senate select committee on intelligence in any way that I can,” Page wrote. “But please note that any records I may have saved as a private citizen with limited technology capabilities will be miniscule in comparison to the full database of information which has already been collected under the direction of the Obama administration.”

Page said he had been the target last year of a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (Fisa) warrant, which are normally issued when intelligence or law enforcement agencies can show probable cause that the subject is in the service of a foreign power.

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Page, an energy consultant named last year by Trump as a foreign policy adviser, travelled to Moscow in July 2016 to give an academic talk. He has denied reports that at the same time he met with Igor Sechin, a close associate of Vladimir Putin, and head of the state-run Rosneft oil company.

The Senate committee has asked Page to provide a “list of all meetings between you and any Russian official or representative of Russian business interests” during the campaign, or any such meetings he is aware of involving anyone linked to the Trump campaign.

The letter also asks for “communications records, including electronic communications records, such as email or text messages, written correspondent and phone records” of contacts with Russian officials or business people, or “related in any to Russia” as well as records of his financial or real estate holdings in that country. 

In a joint statement on Friday, Burr and Warner voiced irritation at Page’s response to the committee so far, noting that he claimed in a television interview that he was cooperating with their committee.
“Today we have learned that may not be the case,” the senators said, urging Page to submit the records by the 9 May deadline they laid down.

The Senate committee letters are one of several signs that Senate and House investigations were regaining speed after concerns were raised last month that Republicans were trying to stifle them.

After it was reported in the Daily Beastthat the Senate committee investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election only had seven part-time staffers – not one of whom was a trained investigator – the committee hired two more professional staff, including the former head of intelligence law at the National Security Agency, April Doss.

A parallel House inquiry also appears to have revived after its former chair, Devin Nunes, a close Trump ally, stepped aside in early April after it was discovered he was being leaked information by the White House and had not informed other members of the committee.

The ranking Democrat on the House committee, Adam Schiff, who has emerged as a driving force behind the congressional investigations, said that he had much better cooperation with Nunes’s successor, Mike Conaway.

“We are making progress. Mike Conaway and I have worked together in the last several weeks ... in a very non-partisan, very matter of fact way,” Schiff told MSNBC. “We are back to scheduling our witnesses ... We are back to getting new documents from the intelligence community. So things are moving in a very positive direction.”

The California congressman said the committee’s revival was important because “we have very limited resources and so does the Senate, so if either one of these investigations were to gets derailed it would mean only half of the eyes on task.”

In particular, the committee has asked to hear from Sally Yates, a former acting attorney general fired by Trump, whose initial scheduled appearance was cancelled by Nunes at short notice. Yates could provide testimony damaging to the administration, as she had warned the White House in January that the national security advisor, Michael Flynn, was vulnerable to blackmail because he had not disclosed conversations with the Russian ambassador to Washington, Sergey Kislyak. Flynn was forced to resign over the contacts in February.

Yates will give her first public comments on the case to the Senate on Monday, where she will be questioned by a special sub-committee of the Senate judiciary committee chaired by Lyndsey Graham, a senior Republican who has been strongly critical of Trump’s pro-Moscow comments. Yates will appear alongside the former director of national intelligence, James Clapper, and is expected to contradict the White House version of what it knew about the Flynn-Kislyak contacts.

Scott Horton, a lawyer specialising in anti-corruption cases with broad experience of the former Soviet Union said the Republican leadership had been unable to kill off the congressional investigations.

“The Republicans have decided that the game of stalling the investigations entirely, as Nunes had tried to do, was backfiring in a big way, and that they were taking a drubbing in opinion polls where there has been a steady shift to calling for an independent commission, which is the worst outcome for them. They want to have some control.”

Horton said the congressional inquiries still lacked sufficient staff to carry out a proper investigation. In particular, he argued, they needed experts in forensic accounting with an understanding of post-Soviet financial practices, and techniques used by oligarchs to mask asset transfers.

“There are a lot of FBI agents with this kind of expertise. They shouldn’t be hard to find,” he said.

Bernie Sanders throws Palestinians under the bus


Senator Bernie Sanders, right, is embraced by Democratic National Committee chair Tom Perez at a party rally in Mesa, Arizona, 21 April. (Gage Skidmore)

Michael F. Brown-5 May 2017

A majority of Democrats now backs economic sanctions or tougher action on Israel over its continued colonization of occupied Palestinian land, a University of Maryland poll revealed this week.

But progressive Democrats cannot count on a single member of the US Senate to stand firm for Palestinians rights: not Patrick Leahy, not Kamala Harris and not “progressive” firebrand Elizabeth Warren.


His signature appears with those of all 99 of his Senate colleagues on a 27 April letter reaffirming key talking points of the powerful Israel lobby group.

The diverse coalition Sanders brought together will be jeopardized if he thinks Palestinians can be thrown under the bus with no reaction.

The letter, addressed to the UN secretary-general, claims absurdly that Israel is being picked on and singled out by the world body – even though Israel has flouted international law and UN resolutions for decades without ever once being subjected to UN sanctions.

It also smears UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestine refugees, whose overstretched resources mean the difference between subsistence and hunger for a million Palestinians in Gaza, which has been under a decade-long Israeli siege.

The attack on the refugee agency, which also provides education and medical care to millions, is part of a long-standing agenda by Israel and its surrogates to defund it in the apparent reckless hope of removing the rights of Palestinian refugees from the international agenda once and for all.

Betraying the base

Sanders galvanized progressives with his strong Democratic primary challenge to Hillary Clinton. He won many over by aggressively going after Clinton’s record of unconditional, hardline support for Israel.

“There comes a time when if we pursue justice and peace, we are going to have to say that Netanyahu is not right all of the time,“ Sanders told Clinton in a prime-time TV debate. “We cannot continue to be one-sided. There are two sides to this issue.”

It seemed like a decisive shift from Sanders’ shameful and blundering justifications of Israel’s 2014 attack on Gaza that left 2,200 Palestinians, including more than 550 children, dead.

But by signing the letter, Sanders has signaled a retreat. He defended his decision this week in an interview with Dena Takruri of AJPlus:
I asked @SenSanders about Palestine, the BDS movement targeting Israel, and whether he supports a one state solution
“I didn’t write that letter. I signed on to that letter. It’s not a letter I would have written,” Sanders said, wanting to have his cake and eat it too.

Against BDS and equal rights

While offering mild criticism of Israel – he even used air quotes when he said the words “human rights violations” – Sanders deployed a favorite Israel lobby tactic of deflecting attention to abuses by other countries.

Sanders said he does not support the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement, which the Senate letter also attacks. Takruri challenged him to say what Palestinians should do to confront decades of endless Israeli occupation if they are condemned for using violent and nonviolent forms of resistance.
“What, if not BDS, is left for Palestinians to do?” she asked.

“What must be done is that the United States of America must have a Middle East policy which is even-handed, which does not simply supply endless amounts of money, of military support to Israel, but which treats both sides with respect and dignity, and does our best to bring them to the table.”

That sounds great, but Sanders did not explain how an even-handed policy would materialize if he – along with all his Senate colleagues – refuses to stand up, and condemns those who use BDS to challenge one-sided US policy.

Instead, Sanders appears to counsel returning to a so-called “peace process” that has failed for decades. His apparent confidence in the unprincipled triumvirate of President Donald Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas is astonishingly misplaced.

If a two-state solution fails, Takruri asked Sanders, would he support “one-state with equal rights for Israelis and Palestinians alike, and equal citizenship?”

“No, I don’t,” he said. “I mean, I think if that happens, then that would be the end of the state of Israel, and I support Israel’s right to exist.”

That puts Sanders out of step with two-thirds of Americans who would support such an outcome. Worse, it suggests he prefers apartheid to one person, one vote when it comes to Israelis and Palestinians.

Who is being singled out?

In the interview, Sanders repeated the false claims in the letter he signed, that Israel is unfairly singled out.

If one is going to denounce alleged anti-Semitism and anti-Israel sentiment at the UN – albeit for merely condemning Israeli occupation and decades of war crimes – then why does the letter not also acknowledge the much greater anti-Palestinian sentiment harbored by the organization’s most powerful nations, principally the United States with its veto?

It is not true that Israel gets all this supposedly unfair attention. As the UN’s word cloud analysis of its own publications shows, Israel gets far less attention than other countries.




And when Israel’s systematic abuses do get attention, US government machinery goes into action to suppress that criticism, let alone any consequences for Israel.

In March, a meticulously documented UN report detailing Israel’s system of apartheid against the entire Palestinian people was removed from a UN website, an act of censorship committed by the UN secretary-general under direct pressure from the United States.

This cowardice prompted the resignation of the leader of the UN agency that had issued the report.
Israel is being singled out, but it is for impunity that no other country can count on.
That Sanders and other “progressives” would join such an attack on the rights and existence of the Palestinians is another indication that the self-styled Democratic “resistance” to the Trump administration prefers political expediency over principle.

Sanders’ office was not willing to provide a statement to The Electronic Intifada and also refused to comment for Alternet.

Democrats run for cover

At some point, the self-proclaimed resistance will have to stop ducking and running from concerns about Palestinian rights.

For his whole career, Sanders doggedly identified as an independent. His decision to run as a Democrat in the 2016 primaries was motivated by a desire to pull the party to the left. But it seems that the Democratic Party is pulling Sanders and some of his supporters to the right, at least as far as Palestine is concerned.

In February, Sanders-backed congressman Keith Ellison narrowly lost a hard-fought campaign for the chair of the Democratic National Committee, the party’s top governing body.

Ellison has previously been outspoken on Israeli abuses, but tempered his criticism during the campaign, even coming out against BDS.

His victorious rival was Tom Perez, the establishment favorite endorsed by Barack Obama. In a show of unity, Perez immediately appointed Ellison as his deputy.

It appears this unity will come with the cost of progressives like Ellison and Sanders further curtailing their support for Palestinian rights in order to conform with an establishment eager to appease such pro-Israel mega-donors as billionaire Haim Saban.

No going back

The millions who ebulliently joined Sanders’ campaign when he started to talk sense on Palestine and other social and economic justice issues need to haul him back into the 21st century and remind him of the reality of Israel’s decades-old regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid.

One person who is clearly in a position to influence Sanders is his foreign policy adviser, Matthew Duss – a person with whom I have interacted socially and professionally.

Duss has been strong on calling for an end to Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which began in 1967, but more cautious in addressing the other ways Israel violates the rights of millions of Palestinians: its denial of the right of return of refugees and its refusal to grant equal rights to Palestinian citizens of Israel.

As Sanders’ key adviser on this issue, will Duss continue to undercut the BDS movement as he did in his July 2015 congressional testimony?

Then, he indicated support for limited boycott actions targeting settlements, but pushed back against broader Palestinian-led efforts targeting the government, institutions and companies that back those illegal settlements and Israel’s other systematic violations of Palestinian rights.

Like his current boss, Duss expressed clear discomfort with the idea of equal rights for all in a single state, even equating those who support such a democratic outcome with extremists who yearn for “a messianic vision of ‘Greater Israel.’”

Duss has the opportunity to present Sanders with evidence that Americans in general, and Democrats in particular, are moving ahead of the senator on the question of Palestine.

The University of Maryland poll, commissioned by professors Shibley Telhami and Stella Rouse, shows that 56 percent of Democrats back sanctions or more serious action against Israel.

It also indicates that a majority of Americans – 54 percent – wants the US to be even-handed between Israelis and Palestinians. That figure soars to 72 percent among Democrats.

While Sanders talks of being even-handed, he and others are moving in the opposite direction by signing up to the AIPAC-endorsed letter and opposing BDS.

For decades, the Democratic Party’s progressive wing was PEP – progressive except on Palestine. Grassroots activists have, however, been pushing it in the right direction and just last year had Sanders’ support.

There must be no going back.