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

Thursday, June 8, 2017

John Amaratunga threatens journalists
2017-06-08

Furious over the questions asked by some journalists regarding garbage disposal at Bopitiya in Wattala, Minister John Amaratunga is is reported to have threatened them with death while leaving the party office in Kandana today.
According to some journalists who had videoed the entire episode, the minister had turned furious asked the journalists to leave the vicinity when they told the minister that the people were blaming him for the garbage crisis at Bopitya.
“I am the person who shifted it here from there. Do not report false news. Otherwise, I will beat you all to death,” he told the journalists.
Despite the journalists attempting to explain the matter to the Minister, he repeatedly accused them of reporting false news and forced them to leave.
“Get lost," he said using unprintable words."Just see the questions they are asking. If you do not know the facts it is better not to ask. We are the ones who have stopped it,” he said.
When the journalists said they were only conveying what the people were saying, the minister said these journalists need not teach him about people’s views.
“You don’t try to teach me. I know it. Do not come through this gate hereafter. Please... It is enough now. Leave... you just leave!” he threatened.
The minister who was approaching the journalists in a threatening manner was calmed down by those near him.
“Do not make me a bad person by publishing false news,” the angry minister said.

Daham Sirisena and Thilina Surangith acting like spoilt Brats

Daham Sirisena and Thilina Surangith acting like spoilt Brats
Jun 08, 2017
President Sirisena's son Daham is no chicken, he has got into two scrapes already one with a DIGs daughter in law and the next at a night club in Colombo.
Both instance the father had to plead for clemency. The boy after each of those events was banished from home by the Father. Daham Sirisena also never completed his studies in the UK. He failed over and over again and then abandoned the degree he was doing.
Thilina Suranjith's background was that he worked in a communication shop in Polonaruwra until he  met the president's daughter Chathurika Sirisena. Thilina Sirisena works as the Defense coordinator for the President. The man goes around with a police car and in a bullet proof BMW or Benz car.
The chronic Daham Sirisena goes with a siren tooting front and back in a bullet proof BMW X 5.
These vehicles are at the tax payers expenses. While no body would deny the President of those requirement. Surely not his useless good for nothing brats.
These brats are like vultures living off the tax payers.This must stop now. Mr President stick to your promises and control your children. They are no better than the Rajapaksa children,

Know the true story behind Susanthika’s attempted auctioning of Olimpic medal


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -08.June.2017, 11.00AM)  SusanthikaJayasinghe who stooped to do all the sordid biddings of corrupt murderous Rajapakses during their nefarious era , including going to super market to buy rotten dried  fish for them  , and also sought to pedestal Mahinda in power  for   the third time , has now made accusations against the present government . She has alleged  because the latter has taken revenge on her , she has only one choice  - to auction  her two golden medals she won , and leave for Australia. Susanthika recently made this revelation to the media.The Sports ministry giving an official reply to this allegation.
Susanthika told the media thus “ I was working as  sports advisor at the ministry of sports. But with the change of government in January 2015 ,I lost that job . I was given a car and a driver , and paid a monthly salary of Rs. 80,000.00. This was for the tasks I performed as a sports advisor and president’s co ordinating officer. I also had some money earned on my own in my savings which I spent for political activities. Nobody helped me specially. Therefore I have  spent most of what I earned. Since last month –April my salary payment has been stopped. I am not afraid , remember that. I have nothing to lose. Country’s  two biggest medals are in my possession. Before those are given to the museum , I shall auction them and I shall go to Australia. Such a country will receive me.”
The statement issued by the acting secretary to the sports ministry ,Somaratne Vidanapathirane in regard to non payment of salary, and other allegations leveled by  Susanthika ,is hereunder …
With  regard to the charges leveled against the sports ministry by Susanthika via the various media , we explain thus :
Let us first recall with due respect that Susanthika Jayasinghe by winning an Olympic medal in 2000 , did proud to this country. 
The governments in power since that time have gifted cash , house, vehicles etc. to Ms. Susanthika Jayasinghe. In addition  following a request made   by Susanthika to the ministry for funds to publish  her biography , with the permission of the minister , a sum of Rs. 1.1 million was donated  to her last year.
Even after such assistance ,if she says she is facing pecuniary embarrassment , it is a matter for regret.
Firstly ,Susanthika was not  dismissed from the post by the sports ministry  in the manner she claims. Her April salary has been somewhat delayed temporarily , and the explanation for that is  given in this letter. 
The previous government appointed her as an advisor to  the sports minister , and her term had ended in 2015 when this government was installed in power. When lawyer Dayasiri Jayasekera was appointed as minister of sports, the situation changed , and steps were taken to secure Susanthika’s services giving  due respect.
The minister of sports forwarded a message to the cabinet on 2016-05-19 with the aim of  paying  a monthly salary of Rs. 60,000.00 plus a fuel  allowance of Rs. 15000.00 to Susanthika until she reaches the age of 60 irrespective of whoever holds the sports minister post.
The cabinet gave approval based on that message to extend her services from 2016-07-01 every year until 2020 , and to appoint Susanthika as an advisor when  selecting  participants for international games , and as a trainer .  The cabinet also agreed to pay her  a monthly salary of Rs. 60,000.00 based on the salary structure for advisors of state ministries. 
In this connection a letter was sent to her on 2016-08-12 by the Sports ministry secretary and her appointment was to take effect from 2016-07-01. It is stipulated  in  article  8 ‘ The duties designated to you by the sports ministry secretary shall be discharged by  you .The program of work for the particular month shall be submitted to the secretary during the first week of that  month , and at the end of the month , a report of the work done shall be forwarded to the secretary ‘ 
Article 9 stipulates  “ Further , a report on the work done by you during the year , and a report of the program of work which you have prepared    for the ensuing year .
To facilitate  her duties and tasks ,  room 8 on 3rd floor of the building on Torrington playground was assigned , which is also the  building allocated   for  sports associations  of the Torrington playground  .

With a view to producing talented athletes like Susanthika , the sports minister invited Susanthika and former president of athletic federation , Sugath Thilakaratne to the ministry, and requested Susanthika to serve as an  advisor and provide training to   athletic reserve three at that time. So far Susanthika had not provided those services to the athletic sphere  of the country.
From July 2016 until March 2017 , she was paid salaries without any interruption by the sports ministry. Yet Susanthika  has continuously failed to perform her duties stipulated under the articles . From January to March 2017 , Susanthika was sick  , yet the ministry on sympathetic grounds paid her  the salaries during that period.
Even after pampering her , because she did not fulfill the requirements under article 8 , the ministry secretary addressed a letter on 2017-04 -26 to Susanthika, and informed her to forward the monthly  reports  if she is to be paid the salary from the month of April 2017.
The funds we released as a sports ministry to Susanthika are funds fully  belonging to the public of this country. As it  is our responsibility to release public funds to Susanthika in a manner that it is utilized  for the benefit of the country, it is the duty and responsibility of Susanthika to be of service to the sphere of sports of the country duly , commensurate with the  funds she had collected.
Under the circumstances,  we have  no legal right or ethical obligation to release funds to her who has neglected the performance of her duties , and neglected  forwarding  the reports in accordance with the cabinet decisions .
If Susanthika is still  experiencing pecuniary embarrassment , what she should do is not auctioning her medals , rather perform her duties duly while holding  the posts designated to her by the government , and honorably collect a salary , while unhesitatingly  and duly  serving the motherland and the sporting arena .

Towards that   end , the sports ministry  doors are still widely open for her. We therefore respectfully request her to cooperate with the sports ministry to produce some more talented sports  stars  today or tomorrow for  our motherland .”

Somaratne Vidanapathirane 

Acting secretary
Sports ministry.
---------------------------
by     (2017-06-08 05:32:08)

Ban all Israeli settlement goods, Amnesty demands

Ali Abunimah-7 June 2017
Human rights organizations are finally catching up with the Palestinian-led boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign to make Israel pay a price for its crimes against humanity.
On Wednesday, Amnesty International said that all states “must ban Israeli settlement products to help end half a century of violations against Palestinians.”
“The international community must ban the import of all goods produced in illegal Israeli settlements and put an end to the multimillion dollar profits that have fueled mass human rights violations against Palestinians,” Amnesty stated.
The group announced it was launching a campaign to mark this week’s 50th anniversary of Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip, to urge governments to take this long overdue step.

Lawns and swimming pools

“For decades, the world has stood by as Israel has destroyed Palestinians’ homes and plundered their land and natural resources for profit,” Salil Shetty, Amnesty International’s secretary general, said. “While the Palestinian economy has been stunted by 50 years of abusive policies, a thriving multimillion dollar settlement enterprise has been built out of the systematic oppression of the Palestinian population.”
Shetty described a “discriminatory and criminal settlement policy that enables Israeli settlers to live on stolen land in homes with irrigated lawns and swimming pools, while Palestinian communities on their doorstep are deprived of access to enough clean water or electricity to cover their basic needs.”
“Israel has made it abundantly clear that maintaining and expanding settlements takes priority over respect for international law,” Shetty added. “It’s time for the world to send a clear message that it will no longer tolerate the Israeli authorities’ blatant disregard for international law.”
Amnesty’s statement comes more than a year after Human Rights Watch called on businesses to end all activities in or with Israeli settlements.
Human Rights Watch also urged governments to withhold aid to Israel.
Amnesty’s position arguably goes further, by urging governments to ban the importation of settlement goods outright.
This is in line with a growing consensus among international law experts and jurists that trade with Israeli settlements violates international law.
But campaigners face strong opposition from governments that continue to support trade with settlements.

European complicity

The 28-member European Union, Israel’s largest trading partner, has imposed minimal requirements that goods from settlements be accurately labeled.
But the EU’s top envoy in Tel Aviv last year declared that settlement products were still “welcome” in European markets.
Emboldened by such complicity, Israel continues to aggressively expand its colonies on stolen Palestinian land, all of which are illegal under international law.
“It is utterly shocking that, since the occupation began 50 years ago, there has been virtually total impunity for the decades of war crimes, crimes against humanity and human rights violations committed in the occupied Palestinian territories,” Amnesty’s Shetty said.
The group’s endorsement of a total ban on settlement goods is a welcome, if belated, step in bringing Israel and the governments complicit with such crimes to account.

The Daily 202: Trump White House might learn more from studying Whitewater than Watergate as Comey testifies

Then-First Lady Hillary Clinton leaves a federal courthouse in D.C. in 1996 after over four hours of testimony before a grand jury. (Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images)--Hillary confers with Jen Palmieri aboard her campaign plane last November. (Melina Mara/The Washington Post)

Bill Clinton defends himself during a news conference in 1996. (File)--Bob Mueller, then FBI director, is sworn in to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2007. (Susan Walsh/AP)

With Joanie Greve



THE BIG IDEA: How do you say schadenfreude in Russian? That is what alumni of Bill Clinton’s White House and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign are thinking this morning as James Comey arrives on Capitol Hill to testify.

There is a feeling in Clinton World that what goes around comes around. But as pundits increasingly draw comparisons to Watergate, many who suffered through the scandals of the 1990s are also experiencing a sense of déjà vu. As special counsel Robert Mueller ramps up his investigation, they’re having flashbacks to Ken Starr.

President Trump repeatedly attacked the Clintons over Whitewater last year, even reviving the outrageous conspiracy theory that Hillary might have had a hand in Vince Foster’s suicide. Candidate Trump also cheered on Comey, as the then-FBI director (perhaps fatally) damaged her presidential hopes.

No matter how today plays out, Comey’s appearance before the Senate Intelligence Committee will not bring resolution to the inquiries that threaten to imperil the president. Looking forward, a lot of Clintonistas see instructive parallels and lessons that Trump and his staff could learn from their experience. Here are eight:

1. “The Trump administration has yet to understand how the campaign investigation is likely to be the gateway to the inner workings of the Trump empire,” writes Democratic wise man Doug Sosnik, who was a senior adviser to Bill Clinton from 1994 to 2000. “My lesson from those days: Trump and his advisers are in way over their heads and unprepared for what awaits them. During the campaign and transition, the world of Trump remained a spider web of dealmakers whose mission was to expand the family’s fortune, and perhaps their own. Anyone who played in this environment is now legally vulnerable. … The Comey hearing presents the next big test for Trump. His response will either accelerate the downward spiral or signal the administration’s effort to reboot and increase its odds of survival.”

2. Get used to the fog of war. “Having worked in a White House under investigation, I know from experience that it’s even more disorienting than it appears,” says Jennifer Palmieri, who was deputy press secretary in the Clinton administration, in an op-ed for the USA Today network of newspapers. “No one in a position of authority at the White House tells you what is happening. No one knows. Your closest colleague could be under investigation and you would not know. You could be under investigation and not know. It can be impossible to stay focused on your job.”
3. Changing your story, even slightly, looks like a cover up. Jane Sherburne, as special counsel to Clinton from 1994 to 1997, handled Whitewater and associated ethics issues. In an op-ed for The Post, she offers seven pieces of nonpartisan advice to her successors about navigating the Russia crisis. Having covered Trump every day for two years now, this seems like the most important one:

“Put a process in place to ensure consistent and accurate communication about the facts. It should be the job of the special counsel to gather the facts and equip the president and White House staff to speak with authority … Anyone talking to the press or interacting with Congress should be armed with enough information to respond with consistent message points. … Bad things happen when key players stray from the message or have their own communications with the press or Congress that haven’t been coordinated with the special counsel. Inaccurate information may be released that later needs to be explained or corrected, or a public statement may miss an important nuance that creates a legal issue or opens a new line of inquiry. Giving an unequivocal answer (e.g., ‘No. No. Next question.’) before all the facts are known or fully understood can be disastrous. … Loss of discipline deepens the crisis.

Read More


USS Liberty Attacked by Israel 50 Years Ago Today

Watch the VIDEO PROGRAM, "Dead in the Water":

Sources: 1According to Chief Petty Officer J.Q. “Tony” Hart; Remember the Liberty: Almost Sunk by Treason on the High Seas (by Philip Nelson); the late Adm. Thomas Moorer's independent commission October 2003; BBC Documentary 2002; Others

The USS Liberty was a spy ship, keeping tabs on Israel's Arab neighbors and their Soviet advisers.

http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgBasic Facts about USS Liberty: 34 Killed in Action, 174 Wounded in Action, Congressional Medal of Honor; 2 Navy Crosses, 38 Silver/Bronze Stars, 208 Purple Hearts

1967 USS Liberty attackJun-08-2017
(SALEM, Ore.) - Sometimes it's not your enemies you should be wary of. Fifty years ago today, on June 8, 1967, 34 American servicemen were killed and 174 were wounded when Israel attacked the USS Liberty navy ship in international waters.

It was the highest casualty rate ever inflicted on a U.S. naval vessel, with 7 out of every 10 crew members killed or injured. To make it even worse, help did not come for 17 hours.

"Everyone that worked in the space I worked in died," says one survivor, "except me."

Israel's sea and air attack lasted approximately two hours. It was no accident. The Israeli forces attacked with full knowledge that this was an American ship and lied about it.

Israel knew the virtually defenseless vessel belonged to the United States. It was clearly marked with an American flag, and more than 40 antennas capable of receiving every kind of radio transmission. It could not have been confused with any other ship.

Research has revealed that for more than nine hours, Israel had flown over the Liberty almost hourly and maintained radar tracking. American Sailors did not worry about Israel, they felt safe.

Then, suddenly, they were attacked! The USS Liberty was strafed by planes, killing and wounding many Americans, in international waters without warning.

The attack came in the light of day. Men that were off duty were playing games and sun bathing on the deck of the ship. Crew members had no idea whose planes were shooting at their ship - at first.

According to the most reliable accounts, unmarked Israeli aircraft dropped napalm canisters on the USS Liberty bridge, and fired 30mm cannon and rockets into the ship.

Survivors estimate 30 or more sorties were flown over the ship by a minimum of 12 attacking Israeli planes.

The torpedo boat attack involved not only the firing of torpedoes, but machine-gunning of Liberty’s firefighters and stretcher-bearers.
The Israeli torpedo boats later returned to machine-gun at close range three of the Liberty’s life rafts that had been lowered into the water by survivors to rescue the most seriously wounded.”
U.S. Navy fighters located just 40 minutes away were launched to rescue the ship after they received a distress signal. But the White House cancelled the planes just minutes later, and help did not reach the USS Liberty for seventeen hours.

Defense Secretary Robert McNamara ordered the defensive aircraft back to their carriers. He was also well known for escalating our involvement in the Vietnam War, and just one year later, Robert Strange McNamara became President of the World Bank.

Rear Admiral Lawrence Geis had protested the order to recall the U.S. warplanes, to which McNamara replied, “President Johnson is not going to go to war or embarrass an American ally (sic) over a few sailors.1

According to former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Thomas Moorer, “Those men were then betrayed and left to die by our own government.”

It took six days for the battered ship to limp in to Malta, where it was repaired and returned to active duty.

So, why do so few Americans know what happened that day? Good question.

SIMPLE ANSWER: Survivors were forbidden to tell their story under threat of courts-martial. They were told not to even speak to their wives about it. Most didn't, and they suffered tremendous PTSD as a result.

The Johnson administration never sought the prosecution of the guilty parties or otherwise attempted to seek justice for the victims.

It is the only peacetime attack on a U.S. naval vessel that, to this day, the Congress of the United States of America formally refuses to investigate.

Americans who volunteer for the military do not sign up for this. When we use the cliche "support the troops", this is when it really counts. When someone joins the military, they make a commitment with an expectation that they will also be defended and respected. If we count on them, they should certainly be able to count on us.

It's been FIFTY YEARS. There's no longer an excuse to overlook this murderous travesty. Victims of Israel's malicious behavior deserve justice: WE WILL NOT FORGET.

Watch the VIDEO PROGRAM, "Dead in the Water":

Trump vs Putin: Molding Reality



by John Perkins-
We know from quantum physics, chaos theory, and modern psychology that perception governs human behavior. What we refer to as ‘mindfulness’ shares with shamanism the ability to be fully present in ways that allow us to use perceptions of reality to transform objective reality and bring us inner peace and true prosperity. — From draft of John Perkins’ new book
( June 7, 2017, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian)  I’m in Russia, just finished speaking about the need to transform a Death Economy into a Life Economy at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum, and listening to three days of amazing talks and discussions. I found the spirit of cooperation among people from many countries to be deeply inspiring.
I was especially impressed by President Putin’s speech and his emphasis on the need to build bridges between countries in order to deal with the crises around climate change, nuclear weapons, terrorism, and internet crimes. On the other hand, Megyn Kelly, who moderated a roundtable discussion that included Putin and later broadcasted an interview with him over NBC, went on the attack. She sounded like an old-fashioned Cold Warrior as she tried unsuccessfully to get Putin to admit to rigging the US elections. Although I respect Kelly’s rights as a journalist to dig for the truth, she undermined that shortly after her session with him by her statements on an NBC broadcast that Putin had been “aggressive” and “defiant”. Yes, he was defensive when she attacked him, but he was not aggressive. Rather, he – like so many other business and government leaders at this forum – conveyed a perception of hope and cooperation, a perception that can facilitate a new reality in this world where divisiveness and rancor have pervaded for far too long.
Does Russia spy on the United States? Absolutely. Am I defending Putin as a guy who wears a halo? Absolutely not. Does the United States spy on Russia? Of course; we even spy on our allies as we admitted when we were caught bugging Germany’s Chancellor Merkel and others – long before Trump even announced his candidacy. Do both countries hack other countries’ internets? What a silly question. All those actions are remnants of an old system, what I refer to as the Death Economy, a system that goes beyond economics, into politics and social structures.
President Putin himself referred to the need to move from the old system to something much better when he discussed President Trump’s recent call for increased investment in NATO. Putin pointed out that NATO had been created as a counterbalance to the threats posed by the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact. “There is no more Soviet Union, no more Warsaw Pact,” he said. “Why the need to increase NATO?”
It is time to dump a system that results in constant strife, wars, terrorism, climate change, and outrageous inequality and injustice on every continent. What is needed today is a new system; in order to create such a new system, it is essential that we develop new perceptions of what it means to be human on this very fragile space station we call our home.
Corporate executives and other economists and writers I talked to at this forum admitted that they find it challenging to be Americans at a time when the US president seems determined to increase the perception of a world divided, of an “us versus them” philosophy. And when major US media outlets like NBC hark back to attitudes that characterized the Cold War. At the same time, many were encouraged to hear President Putin, UN Secretary General Guterres, and many other business and government leaders try to reverse this perception by expressing hope that President Trump will come around in the next couple of crucial years, that he will change his mind about climate change and other issues – as he has done so many times before.
Throughout this forum, I was struck by the role that perception plays in molding political, environmental, social, and economic realities. Much of my writing and speaking these days focuses on this very subject, including my upcoming webinar, How to Write a Bestseller (In Times of Crises) – Using the Power of Story to Accelerate Change and my Omega workshop, Prosperity through Creativity: Shapeshifting into a Mindful Future.
I look forward to my next stop, another major economic summit in Astana, Kazakhstan, where I will speak and advocate the need to transform a Death into a Life Economy during a roundtable discussion with President Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan.
What role will perceptions play?
Stay tuned. . .
John is a founder and board member of Dream Change & The Pachamama Alliance, non-profit organizations devoted to establishing a world future generations will want to inherit & the author of the NY Times bestseller, Confessions Of An Economic Hitman.

James Comey testifies: Former FBI director says he could not trust Trump to tell the truth

 Former FBI director James B. Comey testified about his interactions with President Trump before the Senate Intelligence Committee June 8. Here are key moments. (Video: Sarah Parnass/Photo: Matt McClain/The Washington Post)



Former FBI director James B. Comey said in dramatic testimony Thursday he could not trust President Trump to tell the truth, leading him to take extraordinary steps to document their private conversations, and to make public the details to spur the appointment of a special counsel to probe the administration over possible links to Russia.

He also accused White House officials of telling “lies, plain and simple,” about him and the FBI in an effort to cover up the real reason for his dismissal last month.

“There’s no doubt that I was fired because of the Russia investigation,’’ Comey said in highly anticipated testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee. “The endeavor to change the way the Russia investigation was conducted, that is a big deal.’’

He also revealed that he was so skeptical about whether Justice Department leadership could handle the politically explosive probe after he was fired, he arranged for details of his private conversations with the president to be made public, so that an outside lawyer would take over the case.

Over nearly three hours of testimony, Comey grimly recounted the events that he said showed the president sought to redirect the Russia probe away from his former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Comey declined to say if he thought the president had obstructed justice, saying that was a determination to be made by Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III. But his detailed account of private talks in which Trump repeatedly brought up the Russia matter, and asked him to issue public statements about it or drop the probe into Flynn, left no doubt in Comey’s mind why he was canned.
“I know I was fired because something about the way I was conducting the Russia investigation was putting pressure on [Trump],’’ Comey said.

In response to Comey’s testimony, Trump’s personal lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, sent out a statement saying the president “never, in form or substance, directed or suggested that Mr. Comey stop investigating anyone,’’

Kasowitz also accused Comey of trying to “undermine this administration with selective and illegal leaks of classified information and privileged communications.’’

A former federal prosecutor, Comey testified that he took detailed notes of his private talks with the president — a departure from his practice with Trump’s predecessor, President Barack Obama. Comey said he did so because he was “honestly concerned’’ that the president might lie about what had been said in their meeting. He said the two spoke in private a total of nine times before Comey was fired, he said.

Comey’s written account of those discussions, made public on Wednesday, has fueled the debate over whether the president may have attempted to obstruct justice by pressuring the FBI director about a sensitive investigation.

he testimony: What we now know about Comey’s interactions with Trump



“This is not a witch hunt, this is not fake news,’’ said the senior Democrat on the panel, Sen. Mark R. Warner (Va.). “This is an effort to protect our country from a new threat that quite frankly will not go away anytime soon.’’

Comey began his testimony by saying he became “confused and increasingly concerned’’ about the public explanations by White House officials for his firing on May 9, particularly after the president said he was thinking about the Russia investigation when he decided to fire him.

He wasted little time repudiating White House statements that he was fired in part because of low morale among FBI employees, and those employees’ supposedly soured attitude toward his leadership.

“The administration then chose to defame me and more importantly the FBI by saying that the organization was in disarray, that it was poorly led,’’ Comey said. “Those were lies, plain and simple. And I’m so sorry that the FBI workforce had to hear them, and I’m so sorry the American people were told them.’’

In his written testimony released Wednesday, Comey described being summoned to a private dinner at the White House in January with the president, who told him: “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty.”
Comey said he “didn’t move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during the awkward silence that followed. We simply looked at each other in silence. The conversation then moved on, but he returned to the subject near the end of our dinner.”

Comey said the conversation, in which Trump raised the question of whether Comey intended to stay as FBI director, despite their three prior discussions about him doing so, raised concerns in his mind.
“My common sense told me what’s going on here is he’s looking to get something in exchange for granting my request to stay in the job,’’ Comey testified.

In testimony broadcast live on national television networks, Comey described his state of mind as he tried to navigate a series of tense conversations with the president about the investigation into possible coordination between Trump associates and Russian operatives.

Comey made clear he felt the discussions were problematic and improper, in that Trump repeatedly pressing him about specific investigations that involved people close to the president.

On Feb. 13, Flynn was forced to resign for misleading Vice President Pence about his contacts with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. At the end of 2016, the FBI investigation into Flynn wasn’t going anywhere, but then on Dec. 29, the Obama administration imposed sanctions on Russia and Flynn had a phone call with the Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak about those sanctions, according to U.S. officials briefed on the probe.

At the time Flynn was fired, he was being investigated for possibly lying about his conversations with the Russian ambassador, Comey said.

The day after Flynn’s ouster, a number of senior officials met the president in the Oval Office to discuss terrorism. At the end of the meeting, according to Comey, Trump asked everyone to leave but Comey.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions lingered behind until the president told him, too, to leave, Comey said.

“My sense was the attorney general knew he shouldn’t be leaving which is why he was lingering,’’ Comey said. “I knew something was about to happen which I should pay very close attention to.’’
Once they were alone, the president told Comey he hoped he could let go of the investigation into Flynn, who had been forced out as national security adviser a day earlier.

“When it comes from the president, I took it as a direction,’’ Comey said. He said he was shocked and concerned about the president’s request, but decided not to tell Sessions about it because he expected the attorney general would soon recuse himself from the Russia probe, which he eventually did.

After the meeting with Trump, Comey said he asked Sessions to prevent him from being left alone again in a room with the president. “His body language gave me the sense of, ‘What am I going to do?’ ” Comey said.

His account made clear that his relationship with Trump was fraught from their very first meeting, which occurred before the inauguration, when he the president-elect that a dossier of unsubstantiated allegations against Trump had been circulating around Washington.

“I didn’t want him thinking that I was briefing him on this to sort of hang it over him in some way,’’ Comey said. “He needed to know this was being said, but I was very keen to not leave him with the impression that the bureau was trying to do something to him.’’

Comey acknowledged, as the president has claimed, that he repeatedly told Trump that he was not personally under investigation. But he also said that in private meetings and one-on-one phone calls, the president repeatedly asked him to say publicly that the he was not personally under investigation — something Comey did not want to do.

After firing Comey, the president tweeted a suggestions that there could be tapes of their private talks.
“The president tweeted on Friday after I got fired that I’d better hope there are not tapes,” Comey said. That made the ex-FBI director think any such tapes would back up his account of Trump’s improper statements, so he said he asked a friend of his to share a memo he had written about the February conversation with a reporter.

“I thought it might prompt the appointment of a special counsel,” Comey said.

Asked by Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) why he felt he had the authority to do that, Comey replied: “As a private citizen, I felt free to share that. I thought it was very important to get it out.”

The friend is Daniel Richman, a law professor and a former federal prosecutor who confirmed his role but declined further comment. The reporter is Michael Schmidt of the New York Times, who declined to comment.

A special counsel was appointed — Robert S. Mueller III, who is a former colleague of Comey’s — and Comey has provided him with his memos, he testified Thursday.

Comey said he still has no idea whether the president actually has tapes of their conversations, but said, “I hope there are and I will consent to the release of them … The president surely knows whether he taped me, and if he did my feelings aren’t hurt.’’

The former director also divulged new details about his concerns about former Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch’s handling of the probe into Hillary Clinton’s private email server during the Obama administration. While the case was ongoing, Lynch asked him to refer to the Clinton email probe as a “matter,” rather than an “investigation.”

Comey said he was concerned by Lynch’s instruction that he refer to it as a “matter” because the wording too closely tracked how the Clinton campaign was trying to describe the FBI investigation.


The former FBI director said he thought that wording “looked silly’’ and “gave the impression that the attorney general was looking to align the way we talked about our work with the way the campaign’’ talked about it. “That was inaccurate,’’ he said. “That gave me a queasy feeling.’’
Burma: Bodies, debris found in search for missing military aircraft


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8th June 2017

BODIES and aircraft debris were found in the sea off the southern coast of Burma on Thursday by a navy ship searching for a military plane which went missing with 122 soldiers, family members and crew on board.

Three bodies, including two adults and a child, were found some 35 km (22 miles) from the southern coastal town of Launglon, the military said in a statement on its official Facebook page.

A plane wheel, two life jackets and some bags with clothes – believed to be from the missing Chinese-made Y-8-200F transport plane – were also found, the statement said, adding the military search will continue.

The Chinese-made Y-8-200F transport plane vanished on early Wednesday afternoon after takeoff from the coastal town of Myeik on a weekly military flight.


The plane lost contact 29 minutes after takeoff while flying at 18,000 feet (5,485 metres) over the Andaman Sea, about 43 miles (70 km) west of the town of Dawei, the military said.

The plane, heading north to Burma‘s largest city Yangon, carried 122 passengers, including 108 soldiers and their family members and 14 crew. Among them were 15 children, 58 adults and 35 soldiers and officers, according to a military statement.

Nine navy ships, five military planes and two helicopters were mobilised on Thursday to search for the missing aircraft.

It is monsoon season in Burma, but a civil aviation official said the weather had been “normal” with good visibility when the plane took off.

'We are not ready to surrender,' Qatar's foreign minister says


Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said that Qatar had never experienced this type of hostility, even from an enemy country
Qatar's foreign minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani gestures as he speaks to reporters in Doha (Reuters)

Thursday 8 June 2017
A dispute between Qatar and some Arab states is threatening the stability of the entire region, Qatar's foreign minister said on Thursday, adding diplomacy was still Doha's preferred option and there would never be a military solution to the problem.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani told reporters that Qatar had never experienced this type of hostility, even from an enemy country. He said there had been no change to Qatar's military deployment and no troops had been moved.
"We are not ready to surrender, and will never be ready to surrender, the independence of our foreign policy," al-Thani said.
People look at pigeons at Souq Waqif market in Doha (Reuters)
"We have been isolated because we are successful and progressive. We are a platform for peace not terrorism ... This dispute is threatening the stability of the entire region," he added.
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and several other countries severed relations with Doha on Monday, accusing it of supporting "Islamist militants" and their arch-foe Iran - charges Qatar says are baseless. 
Qatar’s King Hamad of Bahrain met Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in Cairo on Thursday. In a statement issued by the Egyptian presidency, they gave no sign they were ready to compromise with Doha.
"The leaders agreed the decision came after Qatar insisted on taking a path that is harmful to Arab states and after attempts to prevent it from supporting terrorist groups," the statement said.

"Qatar insisted on interfering in the domestic affairs of Egypt, Bahrain, and other Arab countries in a way that threatens their safety and security and harms Arab national security and unity."
Earlier on Thursday, Bahrain's foreign minister reiterated a demand that Doha distance itself from Iran and stop support for "terrorist organisations". 

Iranian cargo plane delivers food

Meanwhile, Iran confirmed on Thursday that it was sending its first cargo plane carrying food supplies to Qatar, according to the Iranian-backed Press TV. 
And the Emirates Post Group said that it had stopped all types of postal services to Qatar despite the UAE's continued diplomatic relations with Iran. 
In an interview published by Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat newspaper, Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed al-Khalifa said conditions posed by the four countries for a resolution of the crisis were "crystal clear".
"Qatar has to redress its path and has to go back to all previous commitments, it has to stop media campaigns and has to distance itself from our number one enemy, Iran," he said.
"It has to realise its interests are with us, not with another country that conspires against us, wants to dominate and divide us. It has to stop supporting terrorist organisations, Sunni or Shia, and its policy has to be for the benefit of its people."
Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and Bahrain's King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa hold hands in Jeddah (Reuters)
In an earlier interview with the Saudi newspaper Makkah on Wednesday, Bahrain's Sheikh Khalid said he appreciated Kuwaiti mediation to resolve the dispute but that all options were open for his country to protect itself from Doha.
In some of the strongest comments related to those efforts by a senior Gulf Arab official, Sheikh Khalid told the newspaper he doubted whether Qatar would change its behaviour.
On Thursday, Bahrain's information ministry warned local media from posting any statements in support of Qatar, according to the state news agency. 



 threatens all media local and social against posting anything supportive of  or critical of the decision against Qatar !

Kuwait's ruler, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah, travelled from the UAE to Qatar on Wednesday after visiting Saudi Arabia the day before to try to resolve the crisis.

Turkey approves Qatari troop deployment

Turkey's parliament on Wednesday approved a draft bill allowing its troops to be deployed to a Turkish military base in Qatar, an apparent move to support the Gulf Arab country when it faces diplomatic and trade isolation.
Ankara's move comes a day after US President Donald Trump sided with Saudi Arabia in its rift with Qatar and accused Doha of "funding extremism".
Trump is continuing to talk to with all partners in the Middle East to de-escalate tensions, a White House spokeswoman said on Thursday, but gave no other details.
The US president spoke with the emir of Qatar on Wednesday and offered help in resolving the crisis, the White House said.
"The president emphasised the importance of all countries in the region working together to prevent the financing of terrorist organisations and stop the promotion of extremist ideology" in his call with the emir, the White House said.
Trump offered to help resolve the diplomatic crisis, including through a White House meeting, the statement said.
The US president also spoke by telephone on Wednesday with Abu Dhabi's crown prince and stressed the importance of unity among Gulf Arab states, the White House said.
Trump "emphasized the importance of maintaining a united Gulf Cooperation Council to promote regional stability, but never at the expense of eliminating funding for radical extremism or defeating terrorism," during a call with Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahayan, Abu Dhabi's crown prince, the White House said in a statement.

Russian hackers?

Meanwhile, US Secretary of Defense James Mattis called Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Wednesday, a day after he spoke to his Qatari counterpart via phone and praised Qatar’s "enduring commitment to regional security".
The growing Gulf crisis has also pulled the Kremlin and the White House into its orbit, as Moscow dismissed allegations that Russian hackers helped spark tension between Qatar and its former allies.
US officials believe Russian hackers were responsible for the false news story on the state-owned Qatar News Agency two weeks ago that precipitated the conflict, CNN reported on Tuesday.
Andrei Krutskikh, a Kremlin adviser on cybersecurity, told the Interfax news agency: "We're getting tired of reacting to unsubstantiated banalities."
"Whatever happens, it is hackers. It's a stale claim and as ever there is zero evidence, and conclusions are drawn before the incident is even investigated."
Qatar’s foreign minister, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman al-Thani, told CNN on Tuesday that the hacking of Qatar's national news agency was "proved by the FBI".
The US Federal Bureau of Investigations had sent a team to the capital Doha to assist Qatari authorities in finding out what happened.