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

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

By Chathuri Dissanayake -Thursday, 29 June 2017

logoA report presented by the Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera on Government income for the first quarter of 2017 records tax based collection of Rs. 415 billion amounting to 95% of the total income of Rs. 236 billion.

According to cabinet decision briefing notes released to the media Government first quarter income is 22% of the total estimated target for the financial year. However the collection has only reached 94% of the target income for the first quarter.

The cabinet paper presented by the Finance Ministry has noted that the income from Value added Tax and Nation Building tax has exceeded target amount while income tax collection has fallen short of target.   The briefing note highlights that income from excise duty imposed on alcohol and cigarettes has dropped during the first quarter.

Last week Minister Samaraweera proposed to relax laws on liquor sales including lifting the ban on poya day sales. Speaking in Parliament during the a debate on the notifications made under Excise Ordinance the Minister argued that consumption of illicit liquor goes up when duty on liquor is increased. The Minister presented a Notification to reduce the distillery license fee from Rs.100 million to Rs 1 million. A proposal in Budget 2016, the distillery license fee was increased from Rs 100,000 to Rs.100 million and the license fee for liquor manufacturing was upped from Rs.50,000 to Rs.50 million.

Proposing to promote a switch from hard liquor to beer and wine to address the high percentage of illegal liquor consumption in the country, the minister said that banning liquor sales on Christmas day hurts tourism industry. 

SriLankan Airlines: Head Of Flight Ops Capt. Rajind Tells CEO Ratwatte To ‘Back Off’

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In a dramatic move Capt. Rajind Ranatunga mustering courage as the Head of Flight Operations of SriLankan Airlines, officially informed CEO Capt. Suren Ratwatte that in no uncertain terms trainees which included himself also in this instance, will not be permitted to select instructors of their preference for training.
Capt. Rajind Ranatunga Head of Flight Operations
Capt. Ranatunga’s message to the CEO came hot on the heels after CEO Ratwatte changed the rosters of the scheduled Line Check Instructors after roster publication and handpicked Capt. Ranga Amadoru to conduct his first Line Check scheduled for 12th July 2017.
Capt. Ranatunga in his email to the CEO informed him that the flight he was scheduled to be checked on was the inaugural commercial flight the airline was to operate to Hyderabad. He went on to advice the CEO that the airline had never rostered any inaugural flights to be operated by trainee pilots, especially with a safety pilot on board.
This entire saga all came to light after CEO Ratwatte had got down his own instructors to conduct Ground School classes, Simulator Training and was on the verge of selecting his own Line Training Instructor too. This is when Capt. Ranatunga pointed out to the CEO that he is the authority pertaining to the Recruitment and Training of pilots and emphasized that it is his responsibility to maintain the standards expected by the Director General of the Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka.
A few days earlier Capt. Venura Perera the President of the Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka had officially written to Capt. Ranatunga and had expressed his displeasure and also questioned the airline’s Board of Directors’ unprecedented move in offering CEO Ratwatte a virtual flying scholarship. This is as the entire Board of Directors disregarded the airline’s Pilot Recruitment policy, which eventually cost the tax payer around US $ 50,000. CEO Ratwatte was also exempted from having to face the rigorous intake procedure that all Captains’ usually face in such instances and moreover not having to sign the required bond.

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Why is the Govt. allowing Suren Ratwatte to party with SriLankan?

Why is the Govt. allowing Suren Ratwatte to party with SriLankan?


 Jun 28, 2017
It was a well known fact that veteran airline specialist Rakitha Jayawardana was doing a decent job with Sri Lankan Airlines as CEO.
But Charitha Ratwatte who had descended from no where after the January 8 th election had other ideas. He had some how clawed his way back into Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe’s office.
He was given the responsibility by the Prime Minister to select the people to the top post in the New administration. This was a disaster for the UNP.
Because the very people who worked against the government was appointed to key post in the administration by him. One can't blame Ratwatte who was the wilderness and had given up on the UNP, did not know who did what for the UNP.
So it was a total disaster for the government. The party cadres and professionals are very unhappy with the leadership of the UNP, largely due to people like Ratwatte’s conduct. The very thing he did in 2001-2004 until the UNP was kicked out of power at which point Ratwatte abandoned the UNP and was never seen or heard for a decade.
When the government advertised for the post of CEO of Sri Lankan Airlines, Ratwatte was in the thick of it. He cleverly hatched a plan to bring his younger brother who was struggling at Emirates, who had no leadership or management experience as the CEO, at double the Salary of the previous CEO.
When the Airline badly needed a top class turnaround specialist. When the board tried to extend his probation . Ratwatte threatened the Board according to a board member using the Prime Minister's name.
The overall result was a disaster for the government and likely to become the next political land mine for the government at the local government election. Apart from the mismanagement of the airline due to ignorance and incompetence , the CEO has feathered his nest well. For example among the many allegations against him are; CEO Ratwatte has ordered that his preferred line instructor be rostered to do his assessment for re validation of his license.
Also, head of Aviation College Primal de Silva has made it mandatory that all crew are recruited thru his training academy and not to call for any paper advertisements. 56 new crew members were taken in this manner.
He and Bandula Weragama has got themselves promotions with fancy salaries when the airline is struggling to cope up with increasing losses. Head of Human Resources Pradeepa Kelulawala keeps offering job upgrades thru the staff web site almost on a daily basis.
None of these are required at present according to a senior officer except for operational promotions. I.e. Captains, cabin managers etc. Bandula and head of security Major General Chandrawansa parachutted to the airline during the last regime directly from the SL army.
They have befriended Ratwatte and are partying with him. Airline sources say the Chairman is a gentleman and is very weak person, so the two Rathwatte's run the airline. Charitha Ratwatte is the de facto Chairman of the Airline.
The irony is both are clueless as to what to do because both have never run even a small business, so they are both focused on safeguarding their nests by preventing any kind of dissent from the Board.
The Prime Minister's name is used liberally by the Ratwatte's to protect their turf. If the Prime Minister does not have the guts to remove the board , it is now left to the Chief Executive Officer of the country the President, to take a decision like what he did with the Governor to save the administration.

Bandarawela comes to a standstill

Ananda Hapugoda-Bandarawela Group Correspondent-Thursday, June 29, 2017 - 01:00
Thousands of people living in Bandarawela and the adjoining areas thronged to Bandarawela town to protest against the Uma Oya Multipurpose project yesterday. Shops were closed and transport in the town came to standstill as they launched a hartal demanding the suspension of the project.
They shouted slogans demanding the government to suspend the project as their houses are in danger of being caved in owing to the project. These protestors wearing black jackets with black flags lamented that they face severe shortage of water.
Black flags were displayed opposite every building of the town in protest of the project. The protestors later held a massive rally in the heart of Bandarawela town.
Addressing the rally, convenor of people’s movement against Uma Oya project Samantha Vidyarathna said that they will not leave the town until the authorities take action to halt the project immediately
Vidyarathna added that thousands of people living in the area are facing water shortage and their houses are on the verge of collapse.
“We urged the government to stop this project without delay”, he said
Ven Pallegama Gnanarathana Thera of Ginigama Dharmodaya Pirivena said that the people who were affected by the project should receive a compensation. “The government should take action to minimize adverse impact on the people while ensuring compensation to then”, he said.The Uma Oya Multipurpose project was proposed to divert 192 MCM of water annually to the Kirindi Oya to augment the Handapanagala and Lunugamwehera and Weheragala reservoirs by feeder channels in the lowlands.
Environmentalists say that no proper environmental assessment has been done before the project is implemented.
They allege that with the construction of the reservoirs and the tunnel, people living upstream of the planned tunnel are likely to suffer from water shortages.
Cracks are developing in many houses in Weheragalathenna, Makul Ella, Egodagama, Palleperuwa, Udaperuwa and Kurudugolla, Heel Oya, Boralanda and Kurudugolla in the Nuwara Eliya and Badulla districts.
The protesters at the Bandarawela town yesterday. Pictures by Ananada Hapugoda and N.Navaratne
DENGUE TURNS DISASTROUS Hospitals suffer from chronic shortage of beds


DENGUE TURNS DISASTROUS Hospitals suffer from chronic shortage of beds

2017 year has been the year of the dengue mosquitoes. It has only been halfway through the year, but the number of dengue patients have spiked like never before. The rise in dengue has itself caused another travesty as hospitals are inundated with fever patients. The atmosphere in both state and private hospitals as of late is a very tense one, with hospital staff attempting to cope with and provide medical treatment to all patients despite the challenge of limited ward space and other facilities. The Daily Mirror visited the leading hospitals in Colombo and its suburbs as the district grapples the burden of dengue. 
We witnessed suffering patients in almost all hospitals while undaunted medical staff were providing much needed care, despite the setbacks that have sprouted into existence with the dengue menace. 

Patients suffer from bed shortage

2017-06-29
The National Hospital of Sri Lanka, where dengue patients are being accepted day after day, is also faced with the problem of patients outnumbering availability of beds. Upon visiting the wards with dengue patients, we witnessed beds and corridors packed with patients lying on any available space; be it on the floor, benches, foldable beds and the regular hospital beds. Doctors and nurses were bustling through the narrow corridors looking to the needs of patient after patient.  
Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort files as foreign agent for Ukraine work


Then-Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort listens to Ivanka Trump speak at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland on July 21, 2016. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)

 

A consulting firm led by Paul Manafort, who chaired Donald Trump’s presidential campaign for several months last year, retroactively filed forms Tuesday showing that his firm received $17.1 million over two years from a political party that dominated Ukraine before its leader fled to Russia in 2014.

Manafort disclosed the total payments his firm received between 2012 and 2014 in a Foreign Agents Registration Act filing late Tuesday that was submitted to the U.S. Justice Department. The report makes Manafort the second former senior Trump adviser to acknowledge the need to disclose work for foreign interests.

Manafort is one of a number of Trump associates whose campaign activities are being scrutinized by Special Counsel Robert Mueller as part of a probe of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. Mueller’s team has been consolidating inquiries into matters unrelated to the election.

Michael Flynn, the former White House national security adviser, filed a disclosure in March saying he had provided assistance during 2016 to Turkish businessman active in that country’s politics.

As a lobbyist and political consultant in the 1980s, Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort worked with international clients that included two dictators who were then allied with the United States. (Bastien Inzaurralde/The Washington Post)

Manafort and a former associate in his consulting business, Richard Gates, who also worked for the Trump campaign, disclosed their lobbying campaign on behalf of Ukraine’s Party of Regions in an 87-page document which described the gross receipts the firm received and some details of efforts undertaken to influence U.S. policy toward Ukraine. The filing shows the firm spent nearly $4 million to advance the party’s interests through polling and local salaries in Ukraine, activity that does not ordinarily require U.S. disclosure. The filing does not show how much Manafort made personally in Ukraine or how much his firm netted after expenses.

As part of the filing, Manafort disclosed he met in 2013 with Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, an outspoken California Republican known for advocating closer ties between the U.S. and the Kremlin.
Disclosure is required under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) from anyone advocating in the U.S. on behalf of a foreign government or political party. The rules were part of legislation passed in 1938 to counter German propagandists operating in the United States before the start of World War II.

Manafort’s spokesman Jason Maloni said late Friday that the former campaign adviser began the process of preparing his filing in September “before the outcome of the election and well before any formal investigation of election interference began.

“Paul’s primary focus was always directed at domestic Ukrainian political campaign work, and that is reflected in today’s filing,” said Maloni.

Michael Dry, an attorney for Gates, declined to comment. Dry served as a federal prosecutor in the eastern district of Virginia until January, when he joined the Vinson & Elkins law firm. Gates is among the most recent former Trump campaign staffer to get legal counsel to help navigate the Russia probes.
Manafort announced last April that he was considering filing the form after receiving guidance from DOJ regarding work he and Gates had performed in recent years on behalf of the Party of Regions. He said the work with Ukrainian clients ended before Manafort joined the Trump campaign.
At the time, two Washington lobbying firms, including the Podesta Group, also filed registrations describing work they undertook with Manafort to improve Ukraine’s image in the U.S. between 2012 and 2014.

FARA requires so-called foreign agents to register within 10 days of agreeing to conduct work for the foreign entity and to provide updates every six months on political activities. The disclosures require more minute details than what is covered for domestic lobbyists.

For instance, foreign agents must disclose efforts to exert politically-related influence on think tanks and through the media, as well as to directly lobby government officials.

Deliberately failing to file as a foreign agent may result in a felony criminal charge accompanied by steep monetary civil penalties. In practice, however, the Department of Justice generally encourages voluntary compliance and prosecutions under the act are “quite rare,” said Joseph Sandler, an attorney who specializes in political law, including FARA. The Justice Department generally allows people to register retroactively if questions arise about their past activities and the law requires no late fees or other penalties.

“If it was genuinely inadvertent or negligent, if there’s nothing nefarious you want to hide, there’s no downside to retroactively registering,” Sandler said.

Criminal charges for violating FARA have typically been reserved for cases involving foreign agents whose conduct ran afoul of U.S. foreign policy interests. They often come as a package of other criminal charges, like espionage.

For years, Manafort advised an ambitious Ukrainian politician, Viktor Yanukovych, who was elected president in 2010 but fled to Moscow four years later after public demonstrations demanded his ouster. Manafort had worked previously for several political strongmen around the globe, including former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos and Angolan military leader Jonas Savimbi.
Manafort joined the Trump campaign in the spring 2016, as Trump sought to bring more experienced political hands into his operation. Gates, a long time Manafort associate, joined him.

Manafort resigned from the campaign in August 2016, following reports by the New York Times that his name had appeared in a ledger found in Kiev detailing millions of dollars in under-the-table payments from the Party of Regions. Manafort has consistently denied wrongdoing and said that reports alleging that he received funds improperly from Ukrainian interests are false.


On Monday, the head of the anti-corruption unit of the Ukrainian’s general prosecutor’s office said in a television interview in Kiev that his office had “not discovered any evidence proving Manafort’s involvement” in ledger payments. He said his unit was handing the matter over to another office within the prosecutor’s office for further inquiry.

Why should Palestine take a back seat?


Caterpillar equipment is used by Israeli forces to destroy a Palestinian home in the West Bank city of Hebron in January 2015.Mamoun WazwazAPA images

Rod Such-28 June 2017

The contrast between two recent boycott, divestment and sanctions campaigns – one in Barcelona, Spain, the other in PortlandOregon – shows why constantly keeping the focus on Palestine is necessary for activists working to end their communities’ investments in Israel’s human rights abuses.

The city council of Barcelona voted in April this year to “condemn the Israeli occupation and policies of colonization of Palestinian territories,” capping a three-year-long campaign that also resulted in nearly 70 other local authorities in Spain and its autonomous regions declaring themselves “apartheid-free zones.” A key aim of the Barcelona campaign was to ensure that city procurement policies reject contracts with any corporations profiting from Israel’s settlement activities or other abuses of Palestinian rights.

These municipalities and a few others elsewhere in Europe, such as cities in the United Kingdom and France, set a new standard for the international Palestinian-led boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement.

Similar efforts are underway in the United States, focusing on bringing human rights investment or procurement screens to municipalities. These screens can then be used to raise awareness of Israel’s violations of Palestinian rights, with the aim of divestment or bans on procurement contracts with corporations profiting from Israel’s settlements and other war crimes.

If these campaigns become a trend, what implications could they have for the future of the BDS movement?

City governments are at the forefront of resistance to the domestic agenda of President Donald Trump. Several major cities and dozens of others have declared themselves sanctuaries for all immigrants, even at the risk of losing federal funds.

Seattle, Washington, and Davis and Santa Monica, California, responded to Trump’s green light for the Dakota Access Pipeline by taking steps to cut all business and investment ties with Wells Fargo, a major financer of the pipeline planned to run through Standing Rock Sioux land and the Missouri River, the tribe’s natural water supply. The city of Portland recently suspended all investments in corporate securities in response to several divestment campaigns, including a campaign to end investments in Caterpillar due to its role in the Israeli occupation.

Political consensus before economic pressure

Boycott, divestment and sanctions are tactics to apply economic pressure on Israel, urging consumers not to buy Israeli and settlement goods and encouraging corporations to end their complicity with Israeli apartheid. The BDS movement is modeled after the campaign that helped end white minority rule in South Africa.

During the South African anti-apartheid campaign, what came first was not economic pressure but a political understanding and consensus behind the need for economic pressure. An overwhelming international political consensus eventually led to the economic sanctions that helped topple the apartheid regime.

That pressure was one of the four pillars of struggle that led to a democratic solution in South Africa, according to Ronnie Kasrils of the African National Congress, the body at the forefront of the anti-apartheid struggle.

The movement had a major impact in the United States, where a bipartisan political consensus in Congress, including 31 Senate Republicans, overrode a veto by President Ronald Reagan and imposed sanctions on South Africa through the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act of 1986. The declining usefulness of apartheid South Africa as a strategic US ally also played a role in shaping this bipartisan consensus.

The Palestinian-led BDS movement faces a challenge its South African counterpart did not: the formidable grip of the Israel lobby on the US Congress and the Democratic and Republican parties. Palestinians are up against not just an Israeli occupation but a joint US-Israeli occupation financed and maintained by the US government.

How can the BDS movement begin to loosen this grip?

As Israel increasingly becomes a niche right-wing issue , a growing split between the Democratic Party base and leadership over support for Israel’s occupation offers some hope.

A recent Brookings Institute poll showed that 60 percent of Democrats “supported imposing some economic sanctions or taking more serious action” in response to Israel’s settlements in the occupied West Bank and Golan Heights, built in violation of international law. A May 2017 poll conducted by Nielsen Scarborough confirmed the Brookings survey, finding 56 percent of Democrats supported economic sanctions. A Gallup poll in 2014 found that a majority of young people, aged 18-29, and a plurality of women and people of color disapproved of Israel’s bombing of Gaza that year, agreeing that Israel’s actions were “unjustified.”

Even in traditionally Republican states, urban areas are overwhelmingly Democratic, populated by workers and communities of color – those most likely to sympathize with the Palestinian struggle. As a result, campaigns targeting city governments could be national in scope, carrying the potential to further widen the growing split over Palestine in the Democratic Party.

Progressive Except for Palestine

One of the chief impediments to the BDS movement, however, is the failure of liberals to champion Palestinian rights. The paradigm is known as Progressive Except for Palestine (PEP), though the phrase is inaccurate. It applies a label of “progressivism” to a phenomenon that actually reflects national chauvinism, anti-Arab racism, selective application of human rights standards and ultimately a defense of an ethno-nationalist ideology – political Zionism.

This type of alleged “progressivism” is merely a liberal cover for maintaining the status quo of oppression, exploitation and discrimination.

City divestment campaigns have the potential to break the paradigm known as PEP. Local government is at the center of many progressive struggles, ranging from housing and homelessness to police brutality, immigrant rights and environmental concerns.

By joining these progressive forces, BDS activists have an opportunity to educate about Palestine and explain why local and state tax dollars should not be invested in corporations complicit in human rights violations, climate change, mass incarceration and other key social problems. This intersectionality recognizes that what appear to be single-issue struggles are united by a common enemy: a political economic system that places corporate profits above human rights and needs.
But what does it mean to raise Palestine in an intersectional way with other groups that are largely fighting around domestic issues?

When the militarized police forces in FergusonMissouri, brutally cracked down on Black protesters at the same time Israel was raining down bombs on Gaza, people spontaneously drew the connection between an occupying white supremacist police force and Israeli terrorism.

When a corporation like Caterpillar’s equipment is used to demolish homes in Palestine and build Israel’s apartheid wall and its settlements, an obvious symbolic unity is apparent with Caterpillar’s role as Trump’s handpicked contractor for the border wall with Mexico and with the use of its bulldozers to destroy sacred siteson Standing Rock Sioux tribal land while building the Dakota Access Pipeline. While Palestinians were trying to block Caterpillar bulldozers from destroying homes, Sioux activists were chaining themselves to Caterpillar earth excavators to protect their water and land.

For this type of intersectionality to occur, however, boycott, divestment and sanctions activists need to totally break with PEPism. Just as racism permeates our cultural, social and economic structures, making it difficult for anyone to escape its influence, the pervasive PEP paradigm invariably infiltrates our thinking, even unconsciously. PEPism is yet another form of chauvinism.

Palestine takes a back seat

The PEP paradigm was a point of contention during the divestment campaign in Portland, Oregon, in which this writer was involved. It is an example BDS activists should learn from.

An example of how PEPism unconsciously crept into strategic decisions regarding the campaign occurred when one organizer suggested that because Palestine is “controversial,” it might be necessary for “Palestine to take a back seat” during efforts to forge intersectional alliances.
During a national conference call of BDS campaigners, one participant even suggested that working with strategic allies might mean not mentioning Palestine at all. As the campaign approached the final vote with the city council, one supporter recommended, “Let’s not bring up Israel.” And a national Palestine solidarity campaign advisor suggested that Palestine should be “de-centered” in final presentations to the council.

In the event, that did not happen, particularly because religious groups within the coalition kept Palestinian rights front and center. Nevertheless, the campaign failed to persuade a single council member to speak out openly against violations of Palestinian rights.

One councilor rejected the opposition’s characterization of Jewish Voice for Peace, part of the Occupation-Free Portland coalition, as “fringe Jews” and remarked that the group just wants “to make Israel a better country.” Otherwise, councilors failed to make a single public statement in relation to Caterpillar’s role in violating Palestinian rights while coming to a decision to stop investing in corporate securities.

Palestine must be a key issue in the wider struggle against human rights abuses. Discrediting the PEP paradigm is the first step to building solidarity with the Palestinian civil society call for BDS.

This task takes on added urgency as Zionist groups identify intersectional solidarity efforts as a primary challenge to defending Israel’s “legitimacy.” BDS activists engaged in alliance building will undoubtedly begin to encounter Israel apologists deliberately working in alliances that touch on environmental, immigration and indigenous rights issues in order to ensure that solidarity with Palestine is absent and Israeli apartheid doesn’t get mentioned at all.

The Portland city council decision to stop investing in corporate securities reflects the importance of alliance building on a principled basis. Several campaigns came together, including longstanding efforts to get the city to divest from fossil fuel companies, from Wells Fargo and other banks financing the private prison industry, from Wells Fargo and Caterpillar for financing and building the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the Occupation-Free Portland campaign to divest from Caterpillar for its role in the Israeli occupation.

In terms of political significance what transpired in Portland was a partial victory compared to what happened in Barcelona. It was a partial victory because one of the campaign’s goals was to get the city to stop investing in Caterpillar, and in that it succeeded. The campaign brought so much community pressure that the city council could not ignore it and had to respond in some way. It opted to get out of all corporate securities.

The public record, however, will always show that two key city advisory committees, the Human Rights Commission and the Socially Responsible Investments Committee, agreed in public sessions that Caterpillar was violating Palestinian rights.

The council itself failed to issue an unequivocal vote against the Israeli occupation, like that made in Barcelona. But popular pressure in Portland was clearly in support of Palestinian rights, and Palestine solidarity activists need to keep up this pressure until the PEP bubble bursts.

Rod Such is a former editor for World Book and Encarta encyclopedias. He lives in Portland, 

Oregon, and is active with the Occupation-Free Portland campaign.

Israeli Minister Plans a Floating Island Off the Coast of Gaza

Israeli Minister Plans a Floating Island Off the Coast of Gaza


No automatic alt text available.BY JESSE CHASE-LUBITZ-JUNE 28, 2017

A member of the Israeli government is floating a new, $5 billion plan for Gaza — an artificial island three miles off the coast that would serve as a secure lifeline for the embattled Palestinian settlement.

The Israeli Ministry of Intelligence, in cooperation with the Ministry of Transportation, released a video detailing its plan for an artificial island with an airport, seaport, power plant, and more that would allow Palestinians a “humanitarian, economic, and transportation gateway to the world without endangering Israel’s security.” The only problem? Gaza would not be in control of it.

The island is the brainchild of Yisrael Katz, Israel’s minister of intelligence and transportation (the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C. stressed that the proposal is that of Katz, and not the government as a whole). Katz first proposed the project seven years ago and brought it to attention again last week. Arye Shalicar, Katz’s media adviser, said that most of the politicians and senior security officials now speak in favor of his plan — a substantial difference from the critiques he met from politicans seven years ago.

Katz suggested that Saudi or Chinese investors would finance and build the island, even though Israel would maintain a firm grip over everything that comes into, off of, or even near the island. (The Washington Post has the official video, promoting a sleek-looking array of ports, checkpoints, and warehouses.)

The island would enable Gaza to reconnect with the world. And while an international police force would be in charge of public order on the island, Israel would remain in control of the surrounding waters and be responsible for security inspection within the port. Many critics fear the project would serve to make permanent the border controls Israel already has on Gaza.

One senior official in Hamas, the Islamist militant group that effectively runs Gaza, told Al-Monitor that “an Israeli-inspired island under full Israeli control would result in the perpetuation of the blockade.” The official said that the only solution would be to allow the Palestinians to build a seaport on Gaza’s shore — a condition Israel cannot agree to as they fear the militants will use it to import weaponry. (The Israeli Embassy objected to this quote, offering, “Roughly 1,000 trucks enter daily from Israel into the Gaza Strip through the Israeli border, so there is no blockade.”)

Relations between Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza have been dire for ages, even though Israeli forces withdrew from the Gaza strip over a decade ago. Israel worries that the coastal enclave, which remains under the control of Hamas, is a soft underbelly for the country’s security, given its proximity to Egypt and the Sinai Peninsula and plenty of smuggling tunnels underground.

Tensions peaked in 2014, leading to over 1,500 Palestinian deaths in Gaza and around 67 in Israel. Since then, residents in the Gaza strip are essentially trapped within 140 square miles. In the wake of the 2014 violence, Israel blocked Gaza’s ability to import and export goods, which made it difficult to rebuild houses and schools destroyed during the fighting. Today, Israel maintains control over Gaza’s airspace and ports, transportation to the West Bank, trade, taxes, and electricity.

If Israel can find international investors willing to pay billions for an artificial island, it might just have found a way to ease Gaza’s supply problems, if not the strip’s political isolation.

Update, June 28, 2017, 4:12 pm ET: This post has been updated to include comment and clarification from the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C. 


Photo credit: MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty Images
Trump, Senate leaders attempt to regroup after postponing vote to overhaul Obamacare

 Here’s what happened after Senate Republican leaders on June 27 decided to postpone a vote on a health-care bill aiming to overhaul the Affordable Care Act. (Video: Whitney Shefte, Rhonda Colvin, Malcolm Cook, Bastien Inzaurralde/Photo: Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post)

 

Senate Republican leaders bowed to pressure from within their own ranks Tuesday and postponed a vote to overhaul the Affordable Care Act until after the Fourth of July recess, raising new doubts about their ability to fulfill one of the GOP’s core promises.

The delay, which exposes lawmakers to a barrage of lobbying as they face their constituents over the holiday, has left a measure designed to pass swiftly this week teetering in the balance. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) had little choice after the number of Senate Republicans who said they would not support a move to bring up the bill this week rose to five after a new budget analysis of the bill .

In an effort to bring reluctant Republicans along, President Trump convened a meeting of the Senate GOP Conference in the East Room of the White House on Tuesday afternoon, where members aired grievances about what has been a secretive and contentious process. But even amid the newfound harmony, it was clear that the legislation would still need changes to secure enough votes.

“The president got an opportunity to learn all the various positions on things that we’ve been discussing,” McConnell said after the gathering. “We all agreed that, because the markets are imploding, we need to reach an agreement among ourselves here as soon as possible and then move to the floor after the recess.”

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released its analysis of the Senate GOP's health-care bill on June 26. Here are its key estimates for how the plan would impact Americans' health insurance coverage and costs. (Jenny Starrs, Daron Taylor/The Washington Post)

Just how realistic a vote is after July 4 remains unclear. At least one senator who had publicly opposed the procedural vote McConnell had hoped to take Tuesday — Dean Heller (Nev.) — indicated that he was willing to reconsider his initial opposition, if the bill was going to be reworked.
At the White House, Heller playfully but pointedly complained about a Trump-allied super PAC that was airing ads against him in Nevada. By Tuesday night, the group had decided to pull the ads, and Heller had signaled to McConnell that he would continue to engage — far from a “yes” vote, but open to discussing his concerns. Heller’s willingness to deal prompted the super PAC to back down, said two Republicans familiar with the deliberations, although a Republican familiar with Heller said he had never closed the door on talks.

Nonetheless, huge hurdles remain.

Conservatives are blasting the plan for leaving in place too much of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, while a coalition of patient advocates, doctors and senior citizens’ groups have joined Democrats in decrying its proposed cuts to the Medicaid program and rollback of taxes on the wealthy.

On Tuesday, Club for Growth President David McIntosh, who has clashed with Republican Party leaders in the past, issued a statement saying the proposal “restores Obamacare.”
“Only in Washington does repeal translate to restore,” McIntosh said. “And while it’s hard to imagine, in some ways the Senate’s legislation would make our nation’s failing health-care system worse.”

Progressive groups began laying the groundwork to attend senators’ public events, while medical providers and groups representing Americans with chronic illnesses predicted that the bill could leave millions without access to adequate medical care. The Congressional Budget Office concluded Monday that the measure would cause an estimated 22 million more Americans to be uninsured by the end of the coming decade while reducing federal spending by $321 billion.

See where the Senate health-care bill’s subsidy cuts will affect Americans most              




Atul Grover, executive vice president of the Association of American Medical Colleges, told reporters that he and other doctors “take it personally” that the bill would lock people out of insurance for six months if they go for 63 days without a health plan and try to sign up for one the next year.

“We’re there at the bedside,” he said, adding that none of his members would be willing to tell a patient: “I’m sorry about your stage-four cancer. Come back in six months, when your insurance kicks in.”

With Vice President Pence ready to cast a tiebreaking vote on the measure, Republican leaders can lose only two of their 52 members to pass the bill, which no Democrat is willing to support.
At the White House, the president sat between two of the bill’s holdouts — Sens. Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) and Susan Collins (Maine) — and said Republicans are “getting very close” to securing the votes they need even as he acknowledged that they might fail.

“This will be great if we get it done,” he said. “And if we don’t get it done, it’s just going to be something that we’re not going to like — and that’s okay. I understand that very well.”
Collins described the meeting as productive, and said Trump was “really in listening mode.”
She added: “He was taking in all of the comments. There were many senators who raised issues, and, as you can imagine, the issues really run the ideological gamut.”

Members who publicly opposed the bill had faced a full-court lobbying press from party leaders, but they resisted it anyway. Within the past 2½ days, Sen. Ron Johnson (Wis.) has spoken with Trump, Pence, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price and House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.). Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) spoke by phone with Trump on Monday and was scheduled to meet with him Tuesday before the vote was scuttled.

Johnson said he was “grateful” that the vote was postponed, adding that the “real deadline” would arrive when the Affordable Care Act’s insurance markets collapse.

Other Republicans, such as Sen. Patrick J. Toomey (Pa.), acknowledged that the delay could just as easily jeopardize the bill’s prospects. More time, he said, “could be good and it could be bad.”
Organizers at numerous “Resistance” groups, chastened by their premature celebrations after the House’s repeal effort seemed to stall, said that they will use the recess to ramp up pressure on Republicans. CREDO Action, which had organized 45,000 phone calls to Senate offices, planned to increase that number when senators went home. NARAL Pro-Choice America, Planned Parenthood, MoveOn and Daily Action were organizing their own phone banks, while Indivisible groups were organizing visits — and perhaps sit-ins — at local offices.

All of that would supplement under-the-radar but attention-grabbing TV ad campaigns from AARP, Protect Our Care, and other progressive and industry groups. The goal, activists said, is to educate voters and break through to local media, which had not often covered the development of the Senate bill on front pages or in newscasts.

Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said that although “the fight is not over,” he is confident that Republicans will not succeed because their proposals remain unpopular with the public.

“The Republican bill is rotten at the core,” Schumer said. “We have a darn good chance of defeating it, a week from now, a month from now, a year from now.”

Senate leaders had been working with undecided senators to determine whether any skeptics could be won over with additional spending on priorities such as expanding incentives for health-savings accounts favored by conservatives or a fund to help battle opioid addiction favored by Sens. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.). Leaders can add about $188 billion in new spending to the bill without running afoul of Senate budget rules.

As of Tuesday afternoon, the leaders had not earned the votes of the two members, who issued a joint statement in opposition to the proposal.

“As drafted, this bill will not ensure access to affordable health care in West Virginia, does not do enough to combat the opioid epidemic that is devastating my state, cuts traditional Medicaid too deeply, and harms rural health-care providers,” Capito said.

In a sign of how pervasive opposition to McConnell’s plan was, Sen. Jerry Moran (Kan.), usually a reliable GOP vote, tweeted after the measure was delayed: “The Senate health care bill missed the mark for Kansans and therefore did not have my support.”

Senate leaders had hoped to salvage the effort by using the CBO’s estimates of deficit savings to allocate additional funding to try to ease some members’ concerns.

But the release of the 49-page CBO ­report late Monday provided a formidable hurdle for the bill. No new senators immediately said they would back the legislation, and Johnson, Paul, Collins and Sen. Mike Lee (Utah) signaled that they would vote against starting debate on the bill in its current form. A fifth senator, Heller, had expressed his opposition last week and has not shown signs of changing his mind.

Several Republican senators said they devoted the bulk of Tuesday’s meeting to questioning representatives from the CBO about their methods and estimates. Senators complained that the estimates provided in Monday’s reports used old data about how many people were covered through the Affordable Care Act and how much their coverage cost. Others asked that CBO analysts start over with fresh numbers.

“They’re using the March 2016 insurance market,” said Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.). “A lot of what they do is just guessing.”

According to the CBO, two-thirds of 22 million Americans who would no longer have coverage by 2027 would be low-income people who rely on Medicaid. The rest would be people who otherwise would have private insurance. Among those who buy insurance through the ACA marketplaces, analysts found, the consumers who face the largest increases in premiums would be Americans between the ages of 50 and 64.

Next year, about 15 million fewer Americans would have insurance if the Senate bill became law than under the existing law, the CBO projected.

That figure, about 1 million fewer than the House bill, would be equivalent to all the residents in 16 states — Alaska, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, West Virginia and Wyoming — losing health coverage.


Mike DeBonis, Amy Goldstein, Ed O’Keefe, Paul Kane, Elise Viebeck, Robert Costa and David Weigel contributed to this report.

Democrats will be Accessories to the Crime


Trump, Republicans Seek to Euthanize 80 Million Young and Old Americans
by John Stanton-
“These county lessons are significant because Medicaid is the largest funder of preventive health, births/pregnancy, drug recovery and mental health treatment services. When we talk about the growing costs of Medicaid, it is prudent to remember the population being served. Of the 80 million individuals covered by Medicaid today, more than 34 million are children under 18 years old, 7.3 million are low-income elderly and 11 million are disabled. Approximately one-third are very low-income adults between ages 19 and 64, yet these same adults account for less than 16 percent of Medicaid costs. By comparison, the elderly and disabled represent 61 percent of Medicaid costs, with children at around 20 percent. In fact, 50 percent of all U.S. births are covered by Medicaid.” – Matthew D. Chase is the executive director of the National Association of Counties.
“Low income people—an estimated 23 million—will be stripped of all health coverage. Millions of people will suffer needlessly, and many thousands will die an early death. For the authors of these bills and their corporate backers, this is not an unfortunate byproduct, but the deliberate aim of their health care reform. For the richest 10 percent who tower above the lower orders and control the political system and its two major parties, the diversion of money from profits and private bank accounts to keep working people alive and reasonably healthy—especially those too old to serve as a source of surplus value and profit—is an intolerable affront. Life expectancy in America is already declining and mortality rates are rising for the working class, in tandem with the colossal growth of social inequality. The ruling class wants to accelerate this process.” – Barry Grey and Kate Randall
( June 27, 2017, Virginia, Sri Lanka Guardian) Who, exactly, are the people that the Republicans in the US Congress represent? Or, should we ask, do they have the best interests of their local constituents in mind?
If constituent’s means insurance companies, donors and the financial fascist gods they worship, then they are wonderful representatives. They are doing what their masters seek and that is the elimination of 80 million non-economically productive old, disabled and young Americans who rely on Medicaid.
Eating Their Own
It is difficult to comprehend why Republican voters are so inclined to watch as their fellow citizens are likely to be cut off from the lifeline that is Medicaid. It is more appalling, I suppose, to see the Democrats and their constituents standing by, not fighting the Trump-Republican madness, offering no plan and playing it safe in hopes of winning congressional seats in the 2018 elections. In fact, they seem willing to sacrifice those 80 million Americans just to retain their house and senate seats.
If Americans who identify as Republicans–and by their silence Democrats–are willing to kill off, or cause the suffering of so many of their fellow citizens, what does that say about the state of the United States? We are told repeatedly that the economic recovery is on track, unemployment is down, and the stock market is soaring to historical heights. But you would not think that after visiting many of America’s cities, rural areas and many small communities. And now comes word from America’s economic and political overlords that there are not enough qualified employees in America to fill positions that are available.  Who is to blame for that? Why, of course, the “little people”, not the financial and ideological savages who are ripping apart the country.
To force the minions to become qualified, Republicans and Democrats seek to privatize the entire US education system ensuring that corporate teachers will train “we the people” to become qualified for this and that job. But that will create two societies in the United States: One in which 30 percent of Americans fill all the “good” jobs and are gated off in their own communities protected by private security companies. The other 70 percent will include homeless tribes, squatters, the unemployed, the sick, the non-productive, and those 80 million Americans dumped off Medicaid. But, hey! For an $800 billion tax cut for the wealthy–thanks to crippling Medicaid–what is a few million unproductive lives?
If euthanasia became acceptable across the land, Trump and his Republican moneychangers would pass legislation containing standards staying alive on productivity, health, and taxable income. The Democrats would shrug their shoulders.
Thanks a Lot!
The fact is that the American people are the nation’s most important infrastructure. But with each passing day, they are being subjected to death on the installment plan. It took a few decades for the financial cannibals to eat the social programs of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson. President Jimmy Carter kicked it off with a focus on urban areas.
In 1978, Jimmy Carter released the United States’ first comprehensive national urban policy, A New Partnership to Conserve America’s Communities. With its emphasis on voluntarism, decentralization, and public–private partnerships, the national urban policy accelerated the devolution of social policy begun under the Nixon Administration and laid the foundation for Reagan’s retrenchment. Looking beyond the urban policy deliberations to the activities of two other Carter initiatives, the National Commission on Neighborhoods and the White Conference on Balanced Growth and National Economic Development, demonstrates that state and local officials and neighborhood advocates were complicit in establishing and legitimating urban policies predicated on privatization and devolution.”
Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barak Obama took the baton from Carter and continued the destruction of American society. Trump has eagerly grabbed that baton. Now, the country is more notably vicious, partisan, politically paralyzed, at war, confused and, in some segments of the population, afraid. (As an aside, I was walking past an Indian family seated on benches in a park. There were five of them with two being teenagers. I overheard one of the adults and the two teenagers talking about being deported. “Where would we go,” one teenager asked. Another said, “You are from here, they won’t deport you.” Thanks be to President Donald J. Trump!)
On June 26, the US Supreme Court weighed in on Trump’s travel ban. The Court ruled that, absent a foreign national’s demonstrated connection to someone in the United States (family, employer, etc.), the person would not be allowed into the country. The Supreme Court will hear the case in October 2017. It is anyone’s guess what the court will ultimately rule.
Fight them There to Protect the Dystopia Here
Pentagon officials are fond of saying that the world is the most volatile that they’ve seen in their careers. Indeed it is, and they need look no further than their own homeland. A good comparison for the internal political, social and cultural dynamic of the United States homeland is the melting and crumbling ice sheets in West Antarctica. Scientists say there are “natural” processes at work on the ice sheets. Can we say that “natural” historical processes at work that are fracturing the American Republic? Is Trump the political version of Climate Change?
Trump and the Republicans—and their partners in crime the Democrats—are accelerating the crackup of the American Republic. Trump’s people are unrepentant liars, no more so than Trump himself. Disaster follows in Trump’s wake. The Boeing plant that Trump visited is dumping 200 workers. Saudi Arabia, with Trump’s support, seeks to turn Qatar into a Saudi protectorate. The Saudi’s, Egypt and the UAE have in place an economic embargo of Qatar underway that Trump supports. The Middle East and Persian Gulf countries seem to be headed for more violence, if that is possible. And now, the US is engaging in combat action against Syrian government forces that are supported by Russian and Iranian military forces. But all’s well at Trump’s properties.
That’s All Folks!
Blood is flowing from the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence. Lingchi, or death by 1,000 cuts, is the Republican’s preferred method for turning the American Republic into a corporate and security state while culling the non-productive human herd in America.
We were all taught as young kids that it was better to fight the bad guys over “there” instead of “here”. But what if “here” turns into a dystopian republic as portrayed in the novels We, Brave New World, and 1984? What if we are, God forbid, headed towards a version of Syria and Iraq?
So many years have passed since George W. Bush was president. I thought that was a dangerous time, and it was. But Trump and the Republicans—and their woeful Democratic “opponents”—have taken wickedness to a new levels of savageness.  Civil rights enforcement are in jeopardy with Jeff Sessions as attorney general. The butchers in the Office of Management and Budget and Treasury could care less about 70 percent of the country’s populace. The Trump administration is nearly lily white in a land filled with Black, Brown and Hispanic, and LGBTQ populations.
The only cabinet member worth respecting is Defense Secretary Jim Mattis. He allowed open celebrations in the Pentagon for Black, Brown, Hispanic, LGBTQ and First Peoples.
Many say after an article like this, well, that’s nice, but what is your solution? The answer to that is in an article I wrote on July 25, 2005. I think it still applies 12 years later. Civil justice groups need to build seamless cross-cultural and political networks in communities around the land. If no new political party can be created, then the Democrats must be retrained to represent the people.
Maybe it would help if people stopped looking down into their mobile devices and take a look at the world around them.
John Stanton can be reached at jstantonarchangel@gmail.com