Peace for the World

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

Monday, May 15, 2017

NDB Chairman involved in a Tender Racket

NDB Chairman involved in a Tender Racket

- May 15, 2017

Hot on the heels of a recent racket involving the Deputy Chairman of a Bank and the former CEO of NDB Bank where the Chief Financial Officer exposed a corrupt share deal resulted in the suspension of the Bank’s Chief financial Officer. 

The saga has now taken another turn where it is now alleged by the Union that the current Chairman Mr. Ananda Athukorala who was given marching orders from a foreign bank for bad lending, also a cousin of the current Prime Minister, had blantatly got himself involved in selecting the company to do the annual report for the bank. 
 
The Union says it is a huge tender given the number of shareholders of the bank. The Unions allege that never in the history of the bank has a non-executive chairman got involved in doing procurement for the bank. They also say since the new Chairman took office the bank has been sliding down fast. According to the Union it won’t be long before Pan Asia Bank another troubled bank, overtakes NDB on profits.
 
The Bank has already fallen behind NTB a small niche bank. The NDB bank board is still packed with former Governor Nivard Cabral's cronies like Lalith Weeratunga's wife and the current government has also not appointed directors with bank experience. Minister Sagala Rathnayake's brother ANCL Chairman was appointed as a Director recently.

Ecstasy Drug Bust: Narcotics Officers Nab Computer Professional With 5000 Pills


Colombo Telegraph
May 16, 2017
Narcotic officers attached to the Department of Excise in Sri Lanka made a major breakthrough last night, when they arrested an Information Technology Security Head of a leading Systems Management Company and busted a haul of over 5000 ecstasy pills in his possession, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
The nabbed quantity of the drug is estimated to have a street value of over Rs 15 million with each pill been sold out in the open at Rs 3000 each.
The apprehended Information Technology Professional hailing from a reputed Systems Management company located in High Level Road Kirulaponne, would be produced in court today.
According to sources within the Excise Narcotics Division, the drug ecstasy, which is now rampantly been circulated in Colombo, Down South and even in Kandy is been sold mainly to the youth of Sri Lanka.
In 2010, quoting a former Sri Lankan security services official, the then US Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Patricia Butenis informed Washington that drug kingpins in Sri Lanka had political patrons in the government and enjoyed certain privileges when carrying out their drug deals. Chief among them highlighted by her was Mervyn Silva, a former Minister of Labour during the Mahinda Rajapaksa led government era. His son, Malaka Silva, was suspected of trafficking the drug “ecstasy” mainly in night clubs in Colombo.
Meanwhile on the 9th of May a Police Constable, Chaminda Abeywickreme was killed and Police Inspector M. Neomal Rangajeewa and Constable Chaminda of the Police Narcotic Bureau were injured, when gunmen apparently opened fire at them whilst conducting a raid in Piliyandala.

Gaza fisherman dies after being shot by Israeli navy


Mohammed Majed Bakr, 25, dies hours after being shot by Israeli navy for 'deviating' from Israeli-imposed blockade zone
Gaza fishermen are banned by Israel from fishing more

Monday 15 May 2017
A Gaza fisherman was fatally shot and four others arrested on Monday by the Israeli navy, which claimed their boat had breached its blockade off the northern Gaza Strip.
Mohammed Majed Bakr, 25, died hours after being shot on his boat off the coast of northern Gaza. His four crewmates were arrested.
The Israeli military said the vessel was fired on when it allegedly "deviated" from its designated fishing zone, imposed as part of a blockade of the strip.
It then ignored warning shots, the military said.
"As a result of the fire a Palestinian was injured and was evacuated to an Israeli hospital for immediate medical treatment."
UN officials have called for the blockade to be lifted, citing deteriorating humanitarian conditions, but Israel says it is needed to keep Hamas, which runs the strip, from importing weapons or materials used to make them.
The size of the fishing zone was set at 20 nautical miles by the Oslo accords of the 1990s. However, it has been reduced by the Israelis to three miles. 
Israel's blockade has impoverished the 4,000 Gaza's fishermen. The International Committee of the Red Cross says 90 percent of them live below the poverty line.

Upholding our rights, resisting the ongoing Nakba


Palestinians in the West Bank city of Nablus take part in a rally to commemorate the 69th anniversary of the Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine by Zionist militias and Israel, 15 May.Ayman AmeenAPA images

It is possible…
It is possible at least sometimes…
It is possible especially now
To ride a horse
Inside a prison cell
And run away…
It is possible for prison walls
To disappear.
For the cell to become a distant land
Without frontiers

– Mahmoud Darwish-15 May 2017

Today marks the 69th anniversary of the 1948 Nakba, the mass expulsion of Palestinians from their homeland. Between 1947 and 1949, Zionist paramilitaries, and subsequently Israeli forces, made 750,000 to one million indigenous Palestinians into refugees to establish a Jewish-majority state in Palestine.

The Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) calls on people of conscience the world over to further intensify BDS campaigns to end academic, cultural, sports, military and economic links of complicity with Israel’s regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid. This is the most effective means of standing with the Palestinian people in pursuing our inherent and UN-stipulated rights, and nonviolently resisting the ongoing, intensifying Nakba.

The Israeli regime today is ruthlessly pursuing the one constant strategy of its settler-colonial project – the simultaneous pillage and colonization of as much Palestinian land as possible and the gradual ethnic cleansing of as many Palestinians as practical without evoking international sanctions.

Nakba continues – so does resistance

Following in the footsteps of all previous Israeli governments, the current far-right government, the most openly racist in Israel’s history, is heeding the words of the Zionist leader Ze’ev Jabotinsky who wrote in 1923: “Every native population in the world resists colonists as long as it has the slightest hope of being able to rid itself of the danger of being colonized. […] Zionist colonization must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native population. Which means that it can proceed and develop only under the protection of a power that is independent of the native population – behind an iron wall, which the native population cannot breach.”

Sixty-nine years after the systematic, premeditated uprooting and dispossession of most of the indigenous Palestinian Arabs from the land of Palestine at the hands of Zionist gangs and later the state of Israel, the Nakba is not over.

Israel is intent on building its “iron wall” in Palestinian minds, not just our lands, through its sprawling illegal settlements and concrete walls in the occupied Palestinian territory, its genocidal siege of over two million Palestinians in Gaza, its denial of the Palestinian refugees’ right to return, its racist laws and policies against Palestinians inside Israel, and its escalating, violent ethnic cleansing in Jerusalem, the Jordan Valley and the Naqab (Negev).

It is sparing no brutality in its relentless, desperate attempts to sear into our consciousness the futility of resistance and the vainness of hope.

Raising the price of complicity

The present mass hunger strike by over 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and the grassroots support that it has triggered give us hope.

The growing support for BDS among international trade unions, including the most recent adoption by the Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions (LO) – representing over 900,000 workers – of an “international economic, cultural and academic boycott of Israel” to achieve comprehensive Palestinian rights, gives us hope.

The fact that none of the 26 Oscar nominees offered a free, $55,000-valued trip by the Israeli government accepted the propaganda gift and that six out of 11 National Football League players turned down a similar Israeli junket gives us hope.

The BDS movement has succeeded in sharply raising the price of corporate complicity in Israel’s crimes against the Palestinian people. It has compelled companies of the size of Orange and Veolia to end their complicity and pushed global giant G4S to begin exiting the Israeli market.

Churches, city councils and thousands around the world have pledged to boycott Hewlett-Packard (HP) for its deep complicity in Israel’s occupation and apartheid. This gives us and many human rights campaigns around the world great hope.

The Barcelona municipality’s decision to end complicity with Israel’s occupation, coming on the heels of tens of local councils in the Spanish state declaring themselves “Israeli apartheid free zones,” gives us hope.

The divestment by some of the largest mainline churches in the US, including the United Methodist Church, the Presbyterian Church USA and the United Church of Christ from Israeli banks or complicit international corporations gives us hope.

The spread of remarkably effective BDS campaigns from South Africa to South Korea, from Egypt to Chile, and from the UK to the US gives us real hope.

An international struggle

The growing intersectional coalitions that are emerging in many countries, organically reconnecting the struggle for Palestinian rights with the diverse international struggles for racial, economic, gender, climate and indigenous justice give us unlimited hope.

In 1968, 20 years after the Nakba but unrelated to it, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “There can be no justice without peace and there can be no peace without justice.” For seven decades, and against all odds, Palestinians have continued to assert our inalienable right to self-determination and to genuine peace, which can only stem from freedom, justice and equality.

But to reach that just peace we realize that we must nourish our hope for a dignified life with our boundless commitment to resist injustice, resist apathy and, crucially, resist their “iron walls” of despair.

In this context, the Palestinian-led, global BDS movement with its impressive growth and unquestionable impact is today an indispensable component of our popular resistance and the most promising form of international solidarity with our struggle for rights.

No iron wall of theirs can suppress or overshadow the rising sun of our emancipation.

The Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) is the largest coalition in Palestinian civil society. It leads and supports the global boycott, divestment and sanctions movement. Visit bdsmovement.net and follow @BDSmovement on Twitter.

The Guardian view on the German elections: Angela Merkel keeps winning


The North Rhine-Westphalia regional election was supposed to be a shoo-in for the SPD in Germany’s industrial heartland. But the ‘Schulzeffect’ wasn’t enough
Armin Laschet, top candidate of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union celebrates after the North Rhine-Westphalia state elections. Photograph: Kay Nietfeld/AFP/Getty Images

Sunday 14 May 2017

Last week France, next month Britain. Yet even by these standards, Sunday’s German regional election in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), won – on exit poll projections – in emphatic fashion by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU), is an agenda-setting contest for Europe too. That’s partly because the state, which borders Belgium and the Netherlands and includes cities such as Düsseldorf, the regional capital, alongside the Ruhr coal and steel belt, is so big and important. A fifth of Germany’s population lives there. They produce a fifth of Germany’s economic output. The region is struggling with social problems. But with Germany’s general election scheduled for 24 September, this was also the last, and the biggest, of the pre-general election regional contests this year. It was one to watch closely, and it will have been – from Athens to London, and Paris to Moscow, not to mention in Berlin itself.

Regional politics in Germany often follow its own distinctive path. German government is devolved, so that local issues really do shape such contests. Yet Sunday’s striking CDU victory matters far beyond the region and the country. It points overwhelmingly towards Mrs Merkel’s return for a fourth term as chancellor in the autumn. NRW is traditionally a bulwark of the centre-left Social Democrats, the SPD. The party ruled there continuously from 1970 to 2005 and again from 2010, until Sunday. So a CDU win looks to be both the historic exception, and a likely harbinger of future CDU success; all the more so when the local leader, Armin Laschet, is widely considered lacklustre and the SPD had been ahead in most polls for the past year. Having lost control for only the third time since 1945, the SPD’s minister-president of NRW, Hannelore Kraft, resigned within half an hour of the polls closing.

While the leading party does not automatically become the government in the German system, where coalitions are routine, a deal between the CDU and the liberal Free Democratic party, which also did well, looks likely – although the eventual outcome will have to await horse-trading between the parties in Düsseldorf. One thing is clear, however. The far-right Alternative für Deutschland will not be part of any new government. Although the AfD held its national congress in Cologne last month in the hope of a strong showing, its splits meant it was projected only to squeeze into the Landtag with 7.5% and it will be shunned. Fears that the AfD might reshape German politics seem to be receding.

Overall, this year’s three regional elections have restored Mrs Merkel to pole position in German politics. The CDU extended its grip in tiny Saarland in March, eased into first place in Schleswig-Holstein a week ago, and has now finished first in NRW too. The so-called Schulzeffect, in which the return of Martin Schulz from the European parliament to lead the SPD gave a huge boost to his party, putting it briefly neck-and-neck with the CDU, has proved temporary. The defeat is all the worse for a party leader who had shaped the campaign as a test of the SPD’s capacity to defeat the CDU. Instead, while the shape of the coalition she may form after 24 September remains unclear, Mrs Merkel’s fourth term seems the increasingly likely outcome.

How has this happened? Partly, it is because the greatest challenge of her third term, the migrant crisis of 2015, appears to have abated as a defining political concern. But it is also because the German economy is growing more steadily again and the crisis in the eurozone has abated, at least for now. Any or all of these things could change, of course, and another summer migration crisis would certainly test Mrs Merkel’s popularity afresh. Nevertheless, the steadying of nerve in the politics of continental Europe after the migration crisis, Brexit and the election of Donald Trump is increasingly palpable. In France this benefited an outsider, Emmanuel Macron. In Germany it boosts the ultimate insider and safe pair of hands, Mrs Merkel.

Republicans and Democrats agree: If Trump has tapes, he’ll need to turn them over to Congress

After President Trump suggested that he taped his conversations with former FBI director James B. Comey, lawmakers of both political parties on May 14 said Trump ought to release any recordings that may exist. (Bastien Inzaurralde/The Washington Post)


In the six days since President Trump abruptly fired FBI director James B. Comey, concern from both parties has mounted about the selection of a replacement and the president’s suggestion that he may have secretly taped conversations with the ousted director.

Key Republican and Democratic lawmakers on Sunday called for Trump to turn over any recorded conversations, based on a tantalizing tweet the president sent last week that said, “James Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!”

“If there are any tapes of this conversation, they need to be turned over,” Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) told NBC’s “Meet the Press,” underscoring a strong bipartisan reaction to the suggestion of White House tapes.

Democrats continued Sunday to call for appointment of a special prosecutor to handle the FBI investigation into whether Trump’s campaign knew of Russian interference in the 2016 election. And after a parade of eight candidates appeared at the Justice Department for interviews, members of Congress began voicing their preferences for Comey ‘s replacement.

After a week of turmoil, none of Trump’s top aides appeared on the major Sunday morning news shows to defend and explain the president’s decision. Host Chris Wallace opened “Fox News Sunday” by highlighting who was not on his guest list, saying that the White House would not make anyone available to discuss the Comey firing.
Trump slipped away to his private golf course in Virginia, where aides said he planned to make calls, have lunch and perhaps hit a few golf balls.

The bipartisan calls for more White House disclosures came as an NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll released Sunday found that just 29 percent of Americans said they approve of Comey’s firing; 38 percent said they disapprove. About 32 percent of respondents said they didn’t have enough information to answer. But among those who have been paying “a lot” of attention to the firing, 53 percent said they disapprove; 33 percent approved.

On Capitol Hill, where the House will return Monday after a recess, members continued to disagree about the need for a special prosecutor to take over the Russia investigation. The inquiry was one of the triggers for Trump’s displeasure with Comey, who he said was a “showboat” seeking media attention.

On NBC, Graham dismissed calls for a special prosecutor or independent commission. “It’s not a criminal investigation. I see no need for a special commission yet,” he said.

But Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) told CNN that many Democratic senators support blocking Trump’s nominee for FBI director until the Justice Department names a special prosecutor.

“We will have to discuss it as a caucus, but I would support that move, because who the FBI director is is related to who the special prosecutor is,” Schumer said. noting that Warner, whose committee is also conducting a Russia probe, also supports a special prosecutor.

His threat to block Trump’s pick may be a bit toothless: Republicans have 52 seats in the Senate, and a rules change made in 2013 by Democrats means that whoever Trump nominates requires a simple majority vote to be confirmed. But the Democratic leader’s comments signal that any Trump pick is likely to face a politically charged confirmation fight.

Most Republicans, including House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) and other House and Senate leaders, oppose a special prosecutor. But Rep. Lloyd Smucker (R-Pa.), a first-term lawmaker, told a Rotary Club luncheon in his district last week that Trump’s reasons for firing Comey raise “serious and legitimate questions about timing, intent and the integrity of ongoing investigations.”

In the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, 15 percent of respondents said they prefer Congress to investigate Russia’s election meddling, while 78 percent supported an independent commission or special prosecutor.

The Senate expects to get more details about Comey’s firing this week in a requested briefing from Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, whose memo to Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that “the FBI’s reputation and credibility have suffered substantial damage” under Comey’s leadership. White House aides continue to cite the memo as a driving factor in the president’s decision. The timing of Rosenstein’s Senate briefing is uncertain.

Republicans and Democrats agreed on one issue in Sunday interviews — the need to find out more about Trump’s suggestion that he may have tapes of private conversations with Comey. Trump and his aides have denied reports that the president asked Comey to pledge his loyalty and that the then-FBI director declined.

“I want loyalty to the country. I mean, I want loyalty to the United States of America. I want him to do a good job — or her — to do a great job,” Trump said in an interview on Fox News late Saturday.
Asked about a taping system in that interview, Trump said: “I won’t talk about that. All I want is for Comey to be honest, and I hope he will be, and I’m sure he will be, I hope.”

Lawmakers from both parties said any White House recordings must be preserved for congressional review.

Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), a former federal prosecutor, said that “it’s probably inevitable” such recordings would need to be handed over to Congress and predicted that they would be subpoenaed. Asked on “Fox News Sunday” about Trump’s decision to set up a taping system, Lee called it “not necessarily the best idea.”


Schumer said that if such tapes exist, “the president should turn them over immediately.”

“To destroy them would be a violation of law. But he should turn them over to Congress and to the investigators,” Schumer told CNN’s “State of the Union.” “If there are no tapes, he should apologize to both Jim Comey and the American people for misleading them.”

Appearing on ABC’s “This Week,” Sen. Mark R. Warner of Virginia, the top Democrat on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said his panel or another congressional committee “absolutely” would subpoena Trump for any recordings.

“We have got to make sure that these tapes, if they exist, don’t mysteriously disappear,” Warner said.


Rosenstein, who is overseeing the Justice Department’s Russia probe, has not signaled that he plans to appoint an independent investigator.

On Saturday, Sessions and Rosenstein interviewed eight people for the FBI director job, including Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.); acting FBI director Andrew McCabe; New York State Court of Appeals Judge Michael Garcia; Alice Fisher, who previously led the DOJ’s criminal division; former congressman Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), a former FBI agent; and Frances Townsend, who served as President George W. Bush’s homeland security adviser and is a CBS News contributor.

The next FBI director “should be not a partisan politician, not part of either party,” Schumer told CNN.
Lee said Trump should nominate Judge Merrick Garland, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, to lead the FBI. Garland was former president Barack Obama’s nominee to replace the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, but Republicans blocked the nomination last year to allow Obama’s successor to make the choice.


Also appearing on Fox News, Josh Holmes, a top outside political adviser to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) — who orchestrated the year-long blockade of Garland — said that the Senate leader also would support Garland’s nomination to the FBI post.

Vice President Pence and other senior Republicans have said they would back Garland. Privately, Democrats have expressed doubt that Garland would even consent to an interview for the job.

This Is What Happens When a Family of Business Moguls Takes Over a Country

The Gupta family’s shadowy business empire is a symbol of all that’s wrong with South Africa.
This Is What Happens When a Family of Business Moguls Takes Over a Country

No automatic alt text available.BY ERIN CONWAY-SMITH-MAY 15, 2017

JOHANNESBURG — When thousands of South Africans took to the streets last month to demand President Jacob Zuma’s ouster, an unprecedented show of popular discontent in a country where Zuma’s party has ruled uninterrupted since 1994, some took their frustrations to what they consider the real seat of power: the Gupta family.

Outside the cluster of mansions owned by the notorious business family, in the leafy Johannesburg suburb of Saxonwold, hundreds of protesters waved signs — “Puppet masters must go!” — and chanted a portmanteau slogan that has become a rallying cry against patronage politics: “Zupta must fall!”

The Guptas, an extraordinarily wealthy family led by three brothers from northern India — Atul, Ajay, and Rajesh — have become a lightning rod for South Africans fed up with a president who is widely perceived as corrupt. The brothers have lived in South Africa for just over two decades but have come to own stakes in multiple media properties, an engineering firm, and coal and uranium mines — a business empire that has risen in tandem with the political fortunes of the Zuma family, with whom the Guptas have cultivated a close relationship. Now, having risen together, both families risk falling together amid a groundswell of popular discontent.

More than two decades after the end of apartheid, corruption remains a pervasive problem in South Africa and the Achilles’ heel of the ruling African National Congress (ANC). Still, the brazenness of the Guptas’ alleged influence peddling, and Zuma’s involvement in it, has been extraordinary enough to cut through the daily barrage of headlines about dodgy government contracts and business dealings.

Atul Gupta arrived in South Africa from India in 1993, as the country was preparing for its first democratic election. A small-time businessman, he sold shoes from a flea market stall before starting a computer equipment company, which he and his brothers — who by then had followed him to South Africa — ran from a rented house in the Bedfordview area of Johannesburg. Business boomed, and by 1999 the company’s annual turnover was roughly $9 million. Atul and his brothers went on to expand their interests to mining, engineering, media, and a safari lodge through the holding company Oakbay Investments, which they formed in 2006.

Much of the family’s success has hinged on successful dealings with the government. Gupta-linked companies have proved adept at landing lucrative government contracts, while the family’s newspaper, The New Age, has raked in government advertising. Tegeta Exploration and Resources, a mining company controlled by the Gupta family, is currently facing allegations that it received preferential treatment on contracts to supply coal to Eskom, South Africa’s state power utility, as well as help from Eskom and Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane in purchasing a coal mine last year. The Guptas, Eskom, and Zwane have all denied any wrongdoing.

As the Guptas’ empire has grown, so has the family’s network of close relationships with politicians and government officials. As early as 1998, Atul Gupta was bragging about “having an ANC guy in his pocket,” according to a new book by journalist Pieter-Louis Myburgh. “Atul said that when this guy eventually becomes president, their [the Guptas’] ship was going to come in big time,” a source who had worked with the Guptas told Myburgh.

The guy in the Guptas’ pocket was Zuma, according to Myburgh, and the family had indeed hit it big by the time he became president in 2009. In December 2016, Atul Gupta was ranked as the seventh-richest South African — his personal wealth was valued at some $735 million — in a list based on the disclosed holdings of directors of Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed companies. Oakbay Investments, the main holding company of the Guptas’ empire, in September declared revenue of $192 million for the year ending in February 2016.

The Zumas, for their part, stand accused not only of enabling the rise of the Gupta family but also indulging in its success. The president’s son, Duduzane Zuma, who began working for the Guptas in 2003, has numerous business links to the family, including a stake in the Gupta-controlled Tegeta Exploration and Resources, and is thought to be a multimillionaire.

But the Guptas haven’t just reaped monetary rewards from Zuma’s ascension; they’ve also gained unprecedented access to the inner workings of the state. The family’s Saxonwold home has become an unofficial seat of government, hosting regular visits by cabinet ministers and, until increased public scrutiny made it too big of a liability, the presidential motorcade.

And few South Africans doubt that the family has Zuma’s ear on matters of personnel and policy. The former deputy finance minister has claimed that Ajay Gupta offered him the ministry’s top job, plus $45 million, after complaining that the treasury posed a “stumbling block” to his family’s business plans.

“The Guptas derive unprecedented advantage, power and influence from their relationship with the president and his family,” Myburgh writes in his book. “And the latter derive ample gratification from their ties with the Guptas.”
The Guptas’ ostentatious abuse of state privilege is the stuff of legend in South Africa
The Guptas’ ostentatious abuse of state privilege is the stuff of legend in South Africa. In 2013, the family chartered a jet for 200 wedding guests coming from India. The flight somehow received permission to land at the high-security Waterkloof military base near Pretoria instead of at a commercial airport. A government investigation later that found the visitors had bypassed normal immigration procedures and received an illegal blue-light escort to Sun City, a casino resort booked out for the wedding, which was attended by several cabinet ministers.

Zapiro, a well-known South African political cartoonist, drew the Gupta brothers welcoming the newlyweds to South Africa and telling them: “For your wedding gift we bought a country and a president.”
The Gupta family did not reply to two requests for comment but has repeatedly denied benefiting from its close ties with Zuma. “As we have said countless times, our primary focus is on business, not politics,” the family said in a statement last year.

But Zuma’s political rivals argue that the Guptas’ business interests and the president’s political office are increasingly indistinguishable. Last year, the country’s anti-graft watchdog, Thuli Madonsela, launched an official investigation into whether the Guptas had exerted undue influence over political appointments and government contracts. Madonsela’s report on alleged “state capture” by the Guptas, released in October, called for a judicial commission of inquiry with greater resources to determine the full extent of the problem.

Zuma has since succeeded in tying up the judicial inquiry in the courts. But he has had less success dampening the public outrage that has been building for months and that boiled over last month after he fired his respected finance minister in March as part of a cabinet reshuffle that was widely seen as a purge of his — and, by extension, the Guptas’ — enemies. Since then, a series of mass protests in South Africa’s biggest cities have featured slogans and signs denouncing both the Zumas and the Guptas.

As public opinion turned against the Guptas last year, the family hired the public relations firm Bell Pottinger, which has previously helped burnish the image of Asma al-Assad, the wife of the Syrian president, and various repressive governments. The firm allegedly launched a racially charged campaign in which political opponents of the Guptas were portrayed as agents of “white monopoly capital,” a clumsy PR effort that was extensively detailed by South Africa’s Sunday Times.

Public outrage over the campaign, which allegedly involved a network of fake Twitter accounts pushing a pro-Gupta narrative and identifying white business leaders as the real enemy, eventually forced Bell Pottinger to cut ties with Oakbay. (“To suggest that we would stoke racial tension in South Africa is both insulting and wrong,” the PR firm said in a statement denying “all the allegations made against it.”)

But if the alleged PR campaign was ugly, it arguably served its purpose. Inflammatory rhetoric around race has infected the ANC’s internal leadership contest, allowing Zuma to fend off internal party challenges even as his popularity plummets. As a result, the Guptas’ empire appears more entrenched now than ever. Ministers seen as friendly to the family’s business interests now hold key cabinet posts, and Zuma looks poised to bequeath his leadership role in the ANC to his ex-wife, a move that would all but ensure the Guptas remain an outsized force in South African politics even after his term as president ends in 2019.

“I don’t see them going anywhere anytime soon,” said Ralph Mathekga, the director of research at the Johannesburg-based Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection and the author of the book When Zuma Goes. “They are quite secure.”

Top image: GIANLUIGI GUERCIA/AFP/Getty Images
India: Haryana woman gang-raped, mutilated and killed

IndiaGangRapeDec192-940x491
A protest against the Nirbhaya gang rape case in December 2012. Source: AP

15th May 2017

IN yet another savage rape-and-murder story reminiscent of the 2012 Nirbhaya case, a young woman from Haryana state in north India was abducted and raped before being brutally murdered by her captors.

Assailants allegedly smashed the 23-year old woman’s skull with bricks and crushed it under the wheels of a vehicle. Her body was discovered in an open field on the outskirts of Rohtak town, some 70km from the Indian capital of New Delhi, partially eaten by stray dogs, local media reports say.

The Business Standard reported two men, including the victim’s stalker neighbour, have been arrested since the Saturday incident. Six others are being investigated. Huffington Post India, quoting police, said forensic experts confirmed the woman was sexually assaulted before she was killed.

SK Dhattarwal, head of the Department of Forensic Medicine at the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences in Rohtak, said the woman’s body also indicated her genitals had been mutilated.

The report said police were told the victim’s head and face were smashed with a hard object and crushed under the wheels of a vehicle. This, said the authorities, was to hide the woman’s identity.


According to Reuters, the woman, a labourer, was taken by the men – at least one of whom knew her – by car from her home in Sonipat to Rohtak, where they raped her. When she said she would report them, they “hammered her skull in with bricks”, Superintendent of Police Ashwin Shenvi told the wire agency.
“The way they brutalised her is horrific.”
The woman reportedly went missing on May 9, according to a complaint filed by her family.
 Her neighbour, identified in reports as Sumit, had in the past tried to force her into marrying him, but she refused. It has been alleged he planned the rape and murder to teach her a lesson.

Responding on Sunday, Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar called the incident “unfortunate” and vowed those responsible would face punishment for their actions, Times Now reported.

Sexual violence against women is a highly-charged issue in India, where the horrific, fatal gang-rape of a student on a bus in New Delhi in 2012 – the infamous Nirbhaya case – sparked nationwide protests about entrenched violence against women and the failure of authorities to protect them.


In the Nirbhaya incident, the victim, a 23-year-old physiotherapy student, was heading home with a male friend after an evening showing of the movie “Life of Pi” when six men lured them onto a private bus. They then beat the man with a metal bar, raped the woman and used the bar to inflict more internal injuries.

The pair were then dumped naked on the roadside, and the woman succumbed to her injuries two weeks later.

Indian media later named her “Nirbhaya”, which means “fearless” because rape victims cannot be identified under Indian law. Nirbhaya immediately became a rallying cry for tens of thousands in India protesting the treatment of women.

Last Friday, India’s Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for the four accused in the 2012 case.

Since the Nirbhaya case, India has enacted tougher jail sentences for rapists and promised to try those accused through “fast-track” courts but rape, acid attacks and domestic violence remain common.


Indian media also reported a gang-rape in the city of Gurgaon on the outskirts of Delhi over the weekend.

On average, 50 crimes against women are reported every day by police in Delhi, including at least four cases of rape, according to a senior official in the federal Home Ministry.

Additional reporting by Reuters

Pan-African Academy Helps Gifted Girls Get Into Science and Tech

On the African continent, opportunities for girls to pursue careers in STEM – science, technology, engineering and math – are limited, but a new all-girls academy in Ghana aims to open more avenues for African girls interested in these important fields.
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A student at the African Science Academy in Ghana. Photo Courtesy of the African Gifted Foundation

Rumbi Chakamba-May. 12, 2017

WOMEN ARE HUGELY under-represented in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). UNESCO’s Women in Science report found that they account for only 29 percent of researchers worldwide. In sub-Saharan Africa, this figure stands just slightly higher, at 30 percent.

In an effort to change this situation, the African Gifted Foundationlaunched the first girls-only school in Africa offering advanced courses in science and math. The African Science Academy (ASA), a boarding school located on the outskirts of Accra, Ghana, opened its doors in August last year.

Each year, the school selects academically gifted girls with a passion for math and science from all over Africa, though they must be fluent in English. It prepares them to sit their Cambridge International A-Level exams within a single academic year. The hope is that after this period, the girls will go on to study STEM subjects at university.

Women & Girls sat down with Helen Denyer, administration manager for the London-based African Gifted Foundation, to find out more about the academy and its quest to create gender balance in the STEM fields.

Women & Girls: What is the main objective of the African Science Academy?

Helen Denyer: Even though girls show such huge potential, internationally there is a strong gender imbalance in the STEM fields. This is because girls and women continue to face significant barriers in accessing STEMeducation, such as gender discrimination and lack of encouragement. Our aim at the ASA is to close this gap.

We prepare our students to compete in very male-dominated environments. By not only focusing on their academics but their all-around education, including their confidence and public-speaking abilities, we are preparing them to stand up and have their voices heard, no matter where and with whom they end up working.

Women & Girls: Why is there this gender imbalance when it comes to careers in STEM?

Denyer: Traditionally, STEM subjects are seen as male fields. It is often believed that girls should stick to the arts and business subjects, with boys going into the STEM fields. When I visited high schools in Ghana in order to promote ASA, I found a co-ed school where there was not a single girl pursuing the science options at the high school level. And the situation gets worse the higher one goes up the education ladder: At the undergraduate level, there are even fewer female students and at the PhD level there are hardly any left. This has to do with their upbringing, both by their families and by their teachers.

A student at the African Science Academy takes notes. (Photo Courtesy of the African Gifted Foundation)

Women & Girls: Looking specifically at the African context, what other barriers do girls with an interest in STEM face?

Denyer: The first barrier is that girls are often seen as less important than boys. Hence families sometimes invest more into the education of the boy child than the girl child, which can mean that girls have to stay at home and help their families. This goes for all girls, whether they are interested in STEM or other subjects. In Ghana, 21 percent of girls are married before they are 18, with rates as high as 39 percent in the northern part of the country, according to UNICEF’s State of the World’s Children 2016 report.

When we look more specifically at girls who wish to follow a career path in STEM, we see that there are additional challenges faced, such as girls being discouraged in these fields, girls not taken seriously when they do pursue the STEM option, them not being treated fairly by their male peers and teachers and their voices being ignored. Of course, there are also men encouraging more girls to go into the STEM fields – such as our founder, Tom Ilube – but we need more of them!

Women & Girls: What can be done to help African girls overcome such barriers?

Denyer: Girls interested in science would benefit from being introduced to female role models in the STEM fields. Role models can share their journey, explain how they overcame barriers and inspire younger girls to enter the same fields. Beyond just role models, girls interested in STEM would benefit from mentors who follow them on their journey and offer advice when needed.

Women & Girls: Why is it so important to encourage girls in STEM?

Denyer: Any field of study needs to represent the population. It just does not make sense to have only 50 percent of the world population – males – solving problems for everyone. We need equal representation by everybody in order to solve the problems faced by whole populations. There are some challenges faced by women that men might not have enough exposure to, might not see as a problem or might not know how to solve. The best people to solve a problem are those who face the problem themselves.

West Bengal state power company's computers hit by ransomware attack

A projection of cyber code on a hooded man is pictured in this illustration picture taken on May 13,  2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration
A projection of cyber code on a hooded man is pictured in this illustration picture taken on May 13, 2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration

 Mon May 15, 2017

The global ransomware attack has affected several computers of a state power distribution company in West Bengal but the central government computer system has largely escaped, officials said on Monday.

State agencies that manage government websites and build supercomputers have installed security patches issued by Microsoft Corp.

Federal Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told reporters that there was no serious impact on India, with only isolated incidents in parts of Kerala and Andhra Pradesh states, and the government was monitoring the situation.

However, West Bengal Power Minister Sovandev Chattopadhyay told Reuters that several billing centres of the state's Electricity Distribution Company Ltd (WBSEDCL) had been infected by the ransomware worm.

"The full extent and magnitude of the problem will be realised by tomorrow," he said, the situation will be very serious if household electricity consumption data from the central server of the utility could not be retrieved beforehand.

A power department official who did not want to be named said billing for around 800,000 households was affected when the ransomware blocked access to files in the computers.

A senior official at the Federal Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology said its Computer Emergency Response Team was gathering all possible information about the ransomware.

The cyber attack, which shut car factories, hospitals, shops and schools over the weekend, has proved less severe than anticipated in Asia, but industry professionals have flagged potential risks in the future.

Aruna Sundararajan, secretary of India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, told Reuters the government was constantly monitoring the situation and that a few stand-alone computers at a police department were "back in action" after being infected over the weekend.

It was not immediately clear what the police department did to secure its systems.

India's National Informatics Centre, which builds and manages almost all government websites, and the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, a premier research institute that has built supercomputers, have actively installed patches to immunise their Windows systems, Sundararajan said.

Her ministry has also asked chief information security officers of all organisations run by provincial governments to follow guidelines issued by New Delhi to tackle the issue.

(Reporting by Krishna N. Das and Manoj Kumar in New Delhi, Subrata Nagchoudhury in Kolkata; Editing by Mark Heinrich)