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

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Firing in Pt. Pedro: One dead, two escape











2017-07-09
An individual had died when an illegal sand transporting vehicle was shot at by the Police in Point 
Pedro this evening, the police sources said.
The Police said that the truck was signalled to stop at the Police Check Point in Point Pedro but had proceeded without following the orders.
The Police officers who were at the checkpoint had chased the tipper and had attempted to stop the vehicle by shooting at it.
Sources said that one individual had died on the scene, while two others escaped.
It was also reported the residents of the area pelted at a Police jeep.
The Police said they were conducting a search operation in the area. (Thilanka Kanakarathna)

RTI: SriLankan Airlines Pilots Guild Seeks Information Regarding Airlines’ Downward Spiral

Taking advantage of the country’s Right to Information Act, the Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka have written to SriLankan Airlines Information Officer Shiara Sellamuttu seeking full disclosure to several information pertaining to the salaries of CEO Suren Ratwatte, Head of Human Resources Pradeepa Kekulawla, Chief Commercial Officer Siva Ramachandran, besides information on the botched Pakistan International Airline wet lease deal and the cost incurred to train CEO Ratwatte to fly the Airbus 320 aircraft.
Sellamuttu in her reply to the Pilots Guild letter dated the 29th of June 2017 confirmed a day later that the requested information will be furnished in 14 days’ time.Management Pilots During Better Times – Capt. Pujith Jayakody, Capt. Renuke Senanayake, Head of Flight Operations Capt. Rajind Ranatunga and CEO Capt. Suren Ratwatte
logoMeanwhile Chairman Ajith Dias, who had earlier ordered the airline’s Crew Rostering Department be brought under the Human Resources Department effective the 1st of July 2017, reversed his decision after a meeting that was held last Tuesday between the Head of Flight Operations Capt. Rajind Ranatunga and the airline’s Senior Management Team. This was after the airline’s Board of Directors and Chairman Ajith Dias decided to virtually gift CEO Ratwatte a flying scholarship to follow a full Airbus 320 conversion course which cost the tax payer around US $ 50,000.
Chairman Dias’ feeble attempt in making this change initially was exposed when CEO Ratwatte’s Ground School and Simulator Training was found to be rigged by Instructor Pilots handpicked to specifically conduct his training. Besides Captains Pujitha Jayakody Jnr and Rakhita Wijeratne visiting the office of the CEO at the World Trade Center to conduct personal classes in his plush office, Simulator Instructor Pilot Capt. Mohan Pragasam’s failure to document the ‘tail strike’ CEO Ratwatte was involved in during his training caused serious safety concerns. SriLankan Airline’s management pilots specifically offer contracts to medically condemned and pilots well over the retirement age to conduct Ground, Simulator and Flying classes as instructors and examiners and use them to their advantage. Not wanting to compromise their sole source of income, management pilots are then easily passed despite causing serious errors at times with a mild slap on their wrists. This was exposed by Colombo Telegraph after the CEO’s Secretary contacted the airline’s Crew Scheduling Manager Nalaka de Zoysa who ordered that the scheduled Line Flying Instructor Capt. Amjath Murad Shafeek be replaced by Capt. Ranga Amadoru who CEO Ratwatte had also handpicked to have him cleared to fly the A320 aircraft. It was later revealed that CEO Ratwatte was reluctant in flying with Instructor Pilot Capt. Amjath Murad Shafeek, a no nonsense check pilot who would even fail the CEO if his check flight was below par.
After Colombo Telegraph’s expose, CEO Ratwatte subsequently requested for annual leave midway through his training, stating he was stressed and wished to visit Melbourne Australia in order to spend time with his family. However it was noted that the CEO’s request was made after he was informed that he had been re-scheduled to complete two Line Flying Checks with Capt. Amjath Murad Shafeek on the 9th of July 2017 to Trichy and 12th of July 2017 to Trivandrum.

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Leftist lawmaker behind Israeli bars once again

Khalida Jarrar, center, is greeted by supporters at Jbara checkpoint in the occupied West Bank, upon her release from Israeli prison in June 2016. She was rearrested this month.
 Nedal EshtayahAPA images
Charlotte Silver- 9 July 2017
Just a year after being released from Israeli prison, the leftist Palestinian lawmaker Khalida Jarrar is once again behind Israeli bars.
Jarrar, a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council and a leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, was arrested last Sunday during a pre-dawn raid on her home in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.
Also seized during a series of raids that same night was Khitam Saafin, chairperson of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees.
Israel alleges to have arrested Jarrar because she had increased her work with the PFLP “to an even greater extent” since her release in June 2016, denying she was targeted because of her parliamentary position.
Following her arrest in April 2015, Jarrar was hit with 12 charges related to her activism and advocacy for Palestinian political prisoners. She eventually took a plea deal which reduced the charges to membership in an illegal organization and incitement to violence.
Israel considers most Palestinian political parties “illegal.”
Her lawyer, Mahmoud Hassan, explained at the time that Jarrar accepted the plea deal because she didn’t “expect [to receive] any justice from the court of the occupation.”
After the arrest of Jarrar and Saafin, the PFLP stated that the arrests “underline the futility” of the Palestinian Authority’s fruitless negotiations and “security coordination” with Israel.
Jarrar spoke plainly against Palestinian Authority leader Mahmous Abbas’ attempts to restart negotiations with Israel during a recent interview with The Washington Post.
“The track of direct negotiations has failed, and it brought no hope for the Palestinian people. In fact, the opposite happened,” she said, adding that the West Bank “has more settlers than ever and that is one of the main obstacles to us establishing a state.”
The Palestinian prisoners rights group Addameer, where Jarrar serves as a board member, stated that the arrest of the lawmaker “constitutes an attack against Palestinian political leaders and Palestinian civil society as a whole.”
Jarrar joins 12 other Palestinian legislators being held in Israeli prison, most of whom are being held without charge or trial, according to Samidoun, a Palestinian prisoners advocacy group.
In late June, lawmaker Muhammad Badr was seized during an Israeli military raid on his home, during which soldiers confiscated his personal belongings, according to Samidoun.
Badr has spent a combined 11 years in Israeli prison. Mostly recently he was arrested in October 2013 and spent a year and half in prison without charge or trial.
Badr, like most of the other detained parliamentarians, is affiliated with Hamas.
According to Issa Qaraqe of the Palestinian Authority’s prisoners affairs committee, Israel has detained approximately 70 lawmakers since 2002.
Meanwhile, Muhammad Allan, who embarked on a 65-day hunger strike in 2015, winning his release in November that year, is once again refusing food after his latest arrest in early June.
The 33-year-old lawyer is demanding his immediate release from Israeli prison, where he is once again being held without charge or trial.

Israeli military trial begins for prominent Palestinian activist Amro

Amnesty International says charges against Amro do not 'stand up to any scrutiny'
Palestinian activist Issa Amro arrives for hearing at Israeli-run Ofer military court on Sunday in town of Betunia, near West Bank city of Ramallah (AFP)
Sunday 9 July 2017
Prominent Palestinian activist Issa Amro went on trial in an Israeli military court on Sunday on accusations of inciting violence, charges that rights groups say is a bid to silence him.
"If he is convicted, we will consider Issa Amro a prisoner of conscience," Amnesty's Magdalena Mughrabi said earlier.
The trial began at the Ofer military court in the occupied West Bank, but was adjourned until 22 October after two witnesses testified.
Amro, an advocate of non-violent resistance, is the founder of Youth Against Settlements, a campaign group in the city of Hebron in the West Bank.
In June 2016, he was charged with 18 counts, some dating back to 2010, according to Amnesty International.
Speaking to reporters outside the court, the 37-year-old called the trial a "joke" and said he has no trust that Israel's military justice system would treat him fairly.
His lawyer Gaby Lasky told reporters the "Israeli military cannot stop non-violent demonstrations with weapons, so they're doing it through criminalisation of ... freedom of speech and freedom of demonstration."
Readying for trial @Issaamro thanks 32 in Congress who support him and the people and orgs around the world shining a light on his case

An Israeli military spokesman has said evidence would be presented that Amro had "taken part in riots, attacks on soldiers, calls to violence, and prevented security forces from doing their work".
Two soldiers took the stand on Sunday and testified about a demonstration on 26 February 2016.
Amro and Fareed Al Atrash, another activist, are said to have "incited violence" in that demonstration.
"I think we proved it wasn't an illegal demonstration and it was not a violent demonstration, and incitement is not carrying slogans" critical of Israel's occupation, Lasky told reporters.
Amnesty International has said the charges against Amro do not "stand up to any scrutiny." 
Last month 34 US Democrat politicians wrote to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in support of Amro and urging him to press Israel to drop the charges.
Last month 34 US Democrat politicians wrote to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in support of Amro and urging him to press Israel to drop the charges
In a statement last week, Michel Forst, the UN's special rapporteur on human rights defender and Michael Lynk, the special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, said: "On the information available to us, many of the charges against Amro appear to be directed squarely at his lawful right to peacefully protest against the 50-year-old Israeli occupation.
"If the Israeli military court convicts Mr Amro on any of the charges against him, the convictions will be stained by reasonable doubts about the system's ability to ensure justice," they added.
The two also raised concerns about the Israeli military court system, to which all Palestinians in the West Bank are subject, meeting many international standards of due process required under international human rights and humanitarian law. The conviction rate under the system is more than 99 per cent.
The two UN experts underscored that Amro and other Palestinian human rights defenders have faced a long pattern of harassment, intimidation, discriminatory treatment and physical interference from Israeli military and settler groups, and that the non-violent work of human rights defenders must not be disrupted and attacked by the authorities, even under a military occupation.
"Their rights to freedom of expression and assembly must be respected and protected," they stressed.
Seven killed during cross-border shelling in disputed Kashmir


A masked protester throws pieces of bricks and stones towards Indian police officers during a clash on the occassion of the death anniversary of Burhan Wani, a commander of the Hizbul Mujahideen militant group, in downtown Srinagar July 8, 2017. Source: Reuters/Danish Ismail

2017-07-08T102110Z_972140078_RC18DCDF06D0_RTRMADP_3_INDIA-KASHMIR-940x580  2017-07-08T121720Z_1266390399_RC15390B29C0_RTRMADP_3_INDIA-KASHMIR  2017-07-08T121720Z_1266390399_RC15390B29C0_RTRMADP_3_INDIA-KASHMIR  2017-07-08T102110Z_972140078_RC18DCDF06D0_RTRMADP_3_INDIA-KASHMIR-940x580
Syed Salahuddin, supreme commander of Hizbul Mujahideen, speaks at a rally in Muzaffarabad, Pakistan July 8, 2017. Source: Reuters/M. Saif-ul-Islam

9th July 2017

SEVEN people were killed in Kashmir in cross-border shelling by both Pakistan and India on Saturday, officials on both sides of the frontier said, as the anniversary of a militant’s killing raised tensions in the disputed region.

The violence occurred as hundreds of militants and political activists took to the streets in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir to commemorate the death of Burhan Wani, a militant killed by the army after urging the region’s mainly Muslim population to rise up against Indian forces.

Reuters witness saw protesters holding Pakistani flags and banners and shouting slogans lauding the sacrifice of Wani and others, while pledging to carry on the holy war in Indian-administered Kashmir.

“Jihad is our path, freedom is our destination,” they shouted while holding up portraits of the slain militant.


In Indian-controlled Kashmir, another Reuters witness saw demonstrators wearing face masks throwing stones at police in downtown Srinagar, the region’s summer capital. Police retaliated with teargas and stones thrown using slingshots.

Indian authorities blocked Internet access in Kashmir on Friday and sealed off his home town after Wani’s supporters said they would stage demonstrations to mark the anniversary.
Five people died on Pakistan’s side of the disputed border and 10 were wounded in cross-border shelling, local police officials told Reuters.

Pakistan’s government said it summoned India’s Deputy High Commissioner J.P. Singh over what it called “unprovoked ceasefire violations”.

The Indian army’s defence spokesman said two civilians were killed on its side of the frontier and two injured due to shelling by Pakistani troops. The army responded in kind to the Pakistani shelling, he said.

Militant commander leads protest

The South Asian neighbours have fought two of their three wars since independence in 1947 over Muslim-majority Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part.

India blames Pakistan for pushing in militants from its part of Kashmir to carry out attacks, a charge denied by Islamabad.

India has been struggling to restore normality in Kashmir, deploying thousands more soldiers after Wani’s killing appeared to breathe new life into a 28-year armed revolt that had ebbed, with little international attention.


A Pakistan-based Kashmiri militant commander, who Washington last week added to a list of global terrorists, called for a strike on Saturday to mark Wani’s killing and led the protest in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.

Syed Salahuddin’s United Jihad Council, an umbrella body of anti-India militants based in Pakistan-held Kashmir, vowed to continue its struggle to liberate Kashmir and called upon Islamabad to support their efforts “militarily.”

“Diplomatic, moral and political support will not work anymore,” he said, addressing a large crowd gathered in an open space in Muzaffarabad.

He said a tripartite dialogue between India, Pakistan and the Kashmiris to resolve the dispute in accordance with UN Security Council resolutions, would be welcomed. – Reuters

G 20 Summit – One More Photo Ops

One is not really clear as to what the G20 summit really sought to achieve except as a get together of selected few countries for whatever purpose.

by N.S.Venkataraman-
( July 9, 2017, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) One more G 20 summit has ended , now in Germany ,without paving way for any tangible improvement in the ground situation in the world for the better.
Why protests ?
This G 20 summit has been marked by protests against the G 20 leadership when over 160 police officers were injured, dozens of activists hospitalized and more than seventy protestors were detained. Typically , the German Chancellor thanked the security forces for their work, as the G 20 leaders met behind a heavy police presence in a no- go zone that were off limits to the protestors and most of the people.
While the German Chancellor is right in condemning the violent form of protests as unacceptable, she also should have gracefully accepted the justification for such protests , as G 20 summit has become a cosmetic show of so called world leaders from a few countries , who are not really representative of the countries all over the world. The protestors think that some countries have joined together to discuss the world issues between themselves to benefit themselves with least consideration for other developing nations. The protestors further are of the view that G 20 members want to discuss issues on cross section of subjects relating to the countries who are not part of the G 20 summit. For example, USA and Russia were discussing about the Syrian crisis without involving Syrian government or any people representative from Syria.
Why undermine UNO ?
Obviously, the right forum to discuss such matters and thrash out the problems confronting the world is the United Nations Organisation and not a group of countries which seem to be of the view, that they can think for the world and direct the world movement. G20 summit is an event that has inevitably undermined the importance of United Nations, though it may not be intended that way by G20 members.
Inequality between members
One wonders how the countries participating in the G 20 summit have been short listed who have organized themselves as a forum. Even between these member countries, there are high income inequality. Among G 20 members, Germany recorded the lowest income inequality while South Africa registered the highest. There are considerable differences in the industrial growth and technology development between these countries. There are little common between all of them.
One is not really clear as to what the G20 summit really sought to achieve except as a get together of selected few countries for whatever purpose.
Paris Climate Accord given go by
The world countries joined together and formulated a draft policy to manage the world climate issues and arrived at the 2015 Paris Climate Accord.
However, President Trump of USA has now rejected the accord in one stroke and other G20 members and rest of the world remain surprised and do not know how to go about further in combating global warming issues, without participation of USA which remains as one of the significant polluters in the world.
Discussion on trade issues in vacuum :
On the issue of trade, there is agreement that there should be fair trade which is a universal expectation and not confined to G20 members alone. But, the G 20 members have sought to discuss about world trade issues between themselves, unmindful of the needs and priorities of other countries who are deeply concerned about trade related issues and are not part of the G20 summit.
The decision of the summit with regard to the trade issues are unlikely to be binding on the members , as G20 summit does not have the moral authority that United Nations has. Ultimately, all G20 members would be chalking out the trade policies of individual member countries based on their own self interest , as it has been happening after several G 20 summits earlier.
Whither anti terrorism strategy ?
The world is now suffering due to terrorist activities with hundreds of innocent people losing their lives in one part of the world or the other. Many countries affected by terrorist acts could do nothing about this , as several countries themselves are suspected to be involved in encouraging terrorists directly or indirectly as part of their self centred geo political strategies.
Indian Prime Minister Modi spoke strongly against the terror groups and named a few of them. In spite of such strong speech from Mr. Modi, there was thunderous silence amongst other G 20 members, without any tangible and coordinated action plans.
Cosmetic hand shakes and photo ops
Some of the G 20 members like China and India or USA and Russia have running confrontation between themselves and have mutual suspicions. Cosmetic laugh and hand shake between these members are not going to make them less hostile to each other.
At the end of the G20 summit, the leaders of the member countries will go back to their place after enjoying their retreat and world will become no better. For these G 20 members, the G20 summit is one more photo opportunity.

The sting of knowing your child sometimes prefers the nanny to you



From the kitchen, I could hear my 10-year-old son Benny moaning with a stomach bug. Coming into his room, I put my hand on his clammy forehead, checking to see if he was still feverish. But he batted my hand away and called out for Dora, his nanny. “I want Dora to rub my back,” Benny said. “Get Dora.”

That’s not the only time he’s asked for her instead of me. The other day, I rearranged my work schedule to pick him up from school — normally Dora’s job. I eagerly anticipated seeing his face when he scanned all the other moms and found me. But when his eyes finally met mine, they hardly lit up. “What are YOU doing here?” he said. “Where’s Dora?”

It’s a legitimate question. Unlike me, Dora is always around. She takes Benny and his older sister, Talia, on outings after school. She trundles them off to their haircuts and soccer classes and play dates. Dora and my kids have routines and rituals in which I have no part, often because I’m at work.
Still, it hurts every time they choose her over me. There is anger, yes, as well as pain and jealousy. And then there is a wave of guilt. Does she care for them better than I do? Am I inadequate as a mother? Who is their real mom?
These thoughts and feelings never sit well with me. Why am I so threatened by this wonderful woman’s relationship with my children? I have no reason to be jealous. Dora makes my life possible. She cares for my kids as if they were her own. She brags about Benny’s report card on Facebook and shamelessly trumpets his good looks. At Talia’s bat mitzvah, Dora beamed with a mother’s pride.
Mothers and nannies: It’s a complex relationship. I know moms who have fired their caregivers for becoming too attached to their kids, to say nothing of those let go for being more tied to their phones than to the children under their care.

Since the flood of women entered the workforce in the 1960s, generations of mothers have worried about finding responsible child-care providers. Reports of shaken babies and unattended toddlers add to their anxiety, leading to widespread use of nanny cams. Yes, watching our kids remotely gives us some comfort about their safety. But it also reminds us of all the moments they share with their nannies rather than us.
The resulting feelings are complex. We want our nannies to nurture our kids as we would. We want them to love them — but not too much.

My bond with Dora, though, is different, because Dora also raised me. She’s been with my family since I was 2 years old. She arrived in New York at age 20, after crossing the border in Mexico from Guatemala. At the time, my mom was desperate for someone to watch us while she started a jewelry business. I took to Dora immediately.

Dora did everything for me. She woke me up for school and snuggled with me at bedtime. She listened to my stories and chatted with my friends. She knew Jennifer liked Doritos and Debbie was fond of mac and cheese. And I knew every bit of her life as well — the latest updates from her family in Guatemala, their squabbles and celebrations. We watched the nightly news on Telemundo and Pat Robertson on the 700 Club. She calmed my nerves before finals and I, in turn, helped her study to become a citizen. When I was sick, she was always there to rub my back.

She’s been privy to every romance I’ve had. It was Dora who passed on the red rhinestone bracelet my first boyfriend bought for me when he was too shy to give it to me himself. And it was Dora who comforted me two weeks later, when the phone call came announcing he just wanted to be “friends.”
She protected me not just emotionally but physically. Her room was my refuge, my escape from a taunting older brother.

And I was there for her as well — such as when she learned to drive and required a booster seat to see above the steering wheel. I didn’t complain when it took her a half-hour to drive the mile to pick me up from school — or get anxious at the stream of traffic behind us as we made our way home. I was proud of her for taking on a new challenge, one she undertook for herself but also for me.
Why then, given a long history of affection for Dora, do I wrestle with the loving bond she has with my children?

My father, a psychiatrist, always said that the first few years of a child’s life are the most critical. The care and nurturing they receive during this time helps determine their capacity for love and empathy and trust. Neglect or deprivation in these years can have serious consequences. But the flip side, an overabundance of love and affection, has only positive benefits.

I’ve learned that with children, love is never a zero-sum game. Just as we wonder whether we’ll love our second child as much as our first, we question whether our kids’ attachment to their nanny diminishes the love they have for us. It’s an understandable concern. But I’ve now been on both ends of it. And I know — intellectually, at least — that there’s no reason to fret.

Do I still have twinges of jealousy when they’re cuddling on the couch? Yes. That may never change. But I’m comforted knowing that Dora is there for them as much as she was — and still is — for me.
Kai Falkenberg is a lawyer and law professor in New York City. 

Find her on Twitter @kaifalkenberg.

Is It Still a Muslim Ban if Christian Refugees Are Punished?

The Trump administration has decided to deport Iraqi Christians back to their dangerous homeland, and the timing is more than a little suspicious.
Is It Still a Muslim Ban if Christian Refugees Are Punished?

No automatic alt text available.BY LOLITA BRAYMAN-JULY 5, 2017

The scene in Detroit’s U.S. District Court on June 21 was buzzing with anger and anxiety. Dozens of Iraqi nationals waited to hear whether their detained relatives, and other members of their Detroit community, would be deported back to Iraq. A rally outside the courtroom brought together hundreds of supporters, who came out with signs that read “Trump/Pence hear us, we voted for you” and “Deporting Christians to Iraq is genocide.”

Earlier in June, one of the largest Iraqi Christian populations in the world outside of Iraq was ambushed by raids conducted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Officials knocked on front doors, disrupting Sunday breakfasts and preparations to attend church, to arrest approximately 114 people in the greater Detroit area. Some of those arrested are Muslim, but the vast majority belong to Christian communities of either Chaldean or Assyrian ancestry. All those arrested were taken to jail and slated to board the next available flight back to their native Iraq — a country from which they once escaped.

According to immigration officials, ICE officers were simply processing a backlog of some 1,444 Iraqi nationals living in the United States who had at some point in their lives committed a crime. The ICE Detroit field office said each detainee already faced a final removal order from an immigration judge. By executing their deportation, ICE was addressing a security threat.

But the 121,000-strong Chaldean community in Detroit was shocked and outraged. Christians have long been a minority group in Iraq, often brutally persecuted for their religious beliefs. They first arrived in Detroit in the early 20th century due to the appeal of auto industry jobs. The population continued to grow as refugees fled Iraq after the first Gulf War and during Saddam Hussein’s rule. Since 2014 and the rise of the Islamic State, Christians have fled in even greater numbers. Former Secretary of State John Kerry said last year that the Islamic State was engaging in genocide against Christians, and in January, President Donald Trump promised to prioritizethe resettlement of Christian refugees from the Middle East. Trump’s assurances of the security of their co-religionists caused many members of the Chaldean community in Detroit to vote for him last November.
Many are now wondering why the Trump administration is suddenly targeting Iraqi Christians for deportation.
Many are now wondering why the Trump administration is suddenly targeting Iraqi Christians for deportation. Most of the detainees were subject to final orders of removal, but the government permitted them to reside in the community under ICE supervision for years, even decades. Many of the detainees were considered to be rehabilitated for their past crimes and productive members of society — so why the sudden change?

One theory is that the White House is deliberately targeting Christians in order to gain an advantage in the upcoming judicial review of President Trump’s most recent executive order known as the “travel ban” or “Muslim ban,” which suspended the entry of foreign nationals from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen into the country because of heightened terrorism risks.
Considering the discriminatory statements made by President Trump during his presidential campaign and the predominately Muslim character of the designated countries listed, several federal courts granted injunctions and temporarily halted the execution of the travel ban. On June 26, however, the Supreme Court announced that it will hear oral arguments on the case in October. In the meantime, the justices revived parts of the ban barring people from the six listed countries who have no relationship to an American person or entity. But the Trump administration requested a Supreme Court review of the case back in March and anticipated a thorough examination of any possible anti-Muslim priorities. Targeting Iraqi Christians with prior removal orders would help the travel ban pass constitutional muster, showing that there was no discriminatory intent against Muslims.

“ICE was intentionally targeting our community,” said Nathan Kalasho, an advocate in Detroit helping the detained Chaldeans obtain legal representation. “The Trump administration is trying to stick to their guns that their roundups of immigrants are based on criminal records and previous deportation orders. But the revised travel ban is tied up in courts, and Christian Iraqis are now collateral damage at another attempt to legitimize the travel ban.”

Kalasho said it’s no coincidence the raids occurred on a Sunday — when ICE officials knew many people could be found in church.

One bitter irony of the raids is that if it weren’t for recent political negotiations between Baghdad and Washington, Iraqi nationals in the country would not be at risk of deportation. Iraq only recently agreed to repatriate citizens. In exchange, the administration dropped Iraq from the original list of countries banned by Trump’s executive order. Previously, Iraq refused to issue travel documents to deported Iraqis, and therefore ICE was not able to execute removal orders.

The other side of the argument is that Trump had no intention to specifically go after Iraqi Christians, but sending people back to a hostile home country is the result of the president’s pledge to curb illegal immigration. In February, the Department of Homeland Security broadened the criteria for who is considered a priority for deportation. Previously, ICE could only target undocumented immigrants who had been convicted of a crime. Now, individuals who have “committed acts that constitute a chargeable criminal offense” are deportable. In this specific incident, all of the detainees were ordered removed to Iraq years ago, but not all have a criminal background — some simply overstayed their visas.
ICE is under pressure not only to arrest more people but also to report the statistics of increased enforcement to the American public.
ICE is under pressure not only to arrest more people but also to report the statistics of increased enforcement to the American public. In an official announcement, ICE stated that since January, more than 41,000 individuals were arrested — a 37.6 percent increase over the same period in 2016. The arrests of undocumented immigrants with no criminal record also more than doubled in this same time period. There are currently 1,444 Iraqis who have received their final deportation orders — an easy way for ICE to boost its numbers further. Many of these Iraqis are now in hiding, too scared to even show up to work because ICE agents might be waiting for them.

ICE argues that the detainees are hardened criminals. However, attorneys for the Iraqi nationals — a team of lawyers from the American Civil Liberties Union, CODE Legal Aid, and the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC) — say the crimes are relatively minor and took place years ago, followed by years, and in some cases decades, of law-abiding behavior. One of the petitioners subject to deportation is Jihan Asker, a 41-year-old mother of three children, all U.S. citizens. She has lived in the United States since she was 5. She pled under advisement to misdemeanor fraud in 2003, paid a fine of $150, and served six months’ probation. She has lived in the community — complying with an order of supervision with ICE — since 2008. The lawyers added that even for the petitioners with more serious criminal histories, the conditions in Iraq toward Christians counsel against haste in removing them.

U.S. District Judge Mark Goldsmith in Detroit issued a stay of removal for the 114 Iraqis until July 6. The judge wrote in his opinion that if the deportation orders were carried out, the petitioners would suffer “irreparable harm” and a “significant chance of loss of life.” This hold also extends to the 1,444 Iraqis nationwide, including people who have not yet been detained but are at risk. By July 6, the judge will decide whether or not the federal court has jurisdiction to hear the case and if the government can pursue deportations of all 1,444 Iraqis at risk nationwide.

Ruby Robinson, an attorney with MIRC, explained that there are several tracks attorneys and advocates are pursuing to protect those at risk of deportation.

“The stay order bought the petitioners some time to file motions to reopen their cases in immigration court, where an immigration judge will decide on the validity of an individual’s persecution claim,” he said.

Most of the outstanding removal orders are decades old and do not take into account changed circumstances in Iraq, including the rise of militant Islamist groups. These recent developments give those detained and slated for deportation a new basis for asylum in the United States. Without giving them the right to present their fears to a judge, the U.S. government is prohibited from removing them to a country where they are more likely than not to face persecution

Motions to reopen removal cases are time- and resource-intensive applications, Robinson explained. “We are encouraging people to seek their own counsel to file these motions while we wait to see how the federal judge will proceed with the class action lawsuit,” he said.
There’s also a political track — one that involves speaking with policymakers and working with officials in Washington to get some kind of pardon for the Iraqis.
There’s also a political track — one that involves speaking with policymakers and working with officials in Washington to get some kind of pardon for the Iraqis.The Chaldean Community Foundation has reached outto congressional leaders, and several members of Congress have signed letters to DHS Secretary John Kelly requesting a halt to the deportations. Attorneys also appealed to Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder to consider pardons for those with state felonies.

No matter the government’s intention, the enforcement of Iraqi deportation orders reflects the consequences of Trump’s policies on immigration. Not only is the United States under an obligation to not send people back to a high likelihood of persecution, the zeal to bolster arrest numbers is straining an already overburdened immigration court system. Much like the travel ban, there has been far too much time spent litigating misguided orders. The administration would be better off hiring more judges to tackle the nearly 600,000 cases pending in immigration courts rather than turning its back on longtime American residents.

Photo credit: SAFIN HAMED/AFP/Getty Images

2017: the year we lost control of world population surge?

On the eve of London’s family planning summit, global contraception efforts are faltering – and Trump’s reinstated ‘gag rule’ makes matters worse, say expert
 
Community health volunteer Amina Musenero in Uganda. An eight-year programme to get contraception to more than 100 million women in poorer nations is way off target. Photograph: Juozas Cernius for the Guardian

-Sunday 9 July 2017

Global efforts to help millions of women plan their families – and address unsustainable population growth – are falling woefully short, with looming cuts in funding threatening to hamper progress further, campaigners warn.

On the eve of a landmark summit in London called to accelerate family planning progress in 69 of the world’s poorest countries, latest figures show that an eight-year programme to get contraception to more than 100 million women is way off target.

Concerns are mounting, too, that policies introduced by Donald Trump slashing funds for family planning programmes will exacerbate the problem. The US is the largest donor for family planning, allocating $607.5m (£470.4m) this year.

The summit, coinciding with world population day on Tuesday, brings together top officials from more than 50 countries to discuss how to step up flagging family planning efforts.

The target to get modern contraception to 120 million women and girls by 2020 was set five years ago. So far barely 30 million have been reached – nearly 20 million fewer than the plan required at this stage.

The goal was established to bring international attention to an issue that reduces deaths in childbirth, improves women’s economic chances, and also addresses concerns over the growth in the world’s population – forecast to hit 8 billion in 2023 and almost 10 billion by 2050.

The countries predicted to see the largest growth in population by the mid-century are those with some of the highest rates of unmet need for family planning.


Recent UN predictions show that half the projected growth in population between now and 2050 will occur in Africa – a continent with the world’s highest fertility rates and the lowest use of modern contraception. The population of 26 African countries is predicted to at least double by 2050.
Some experts worry that rampant population growth in Africa will not just aggravate the current migration crisis but could play into the hands of terror groups across the Sahel who seek recruits among large, poor families with few options.

At the same time, the international will to address this has taken a heavy blow from some of Trump’s earliest decisions in office. Since January, Trump has announced a cut in all funding for international family planning in his proposed budget, has stopped funding the UN population fund (UNFPA), and has reintroduced the Mexico City policy, or global gag rule, which prevents money from going to overseas organisations whose work touches on abortion.

What is the 'global gag rule'?
The rule, otherwise known as the Mexico City policy, requires NGOs to certify that they will not perform or promote abortions anywhere in the world as a condition for receiving US family planning funds. Every Republican president since 1985 has implemented it. But Donald Trump has adopted a stringent version of the rule, under which NGOs that refuse to sign will be refused all health assistance, including for HIV, primary care, nutrition, tuberculosis and malaria programs. As much as $8bn in US funding could be affected – money that developing world health budgets can ill afford to do without.
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Trump’s policies have left some of the largest providers of reproductive healthcare services in poorer countries struggling for money. The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IFFP) and Marie Stopes International are already reporting the closure of family planning programmes in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

The UNFPA, the agency charged with ending maternal deaths and promoting family planning services, is facing a $700m funding gap for contraceptives over the next three years.

“It’s looking dire,” said Katja Iversen, chief executive of Women Deliver. “We see great people stepping up, but in no way in the magnitude that is needed. We’re seeing the largest cohort of adolescents ever … and the needs for contraception will be key for the whole world, not just for them.

“It’s a very important moment for the world to rally around women’s ability to decide their own fertility. In that sense, the family planning summit comes at a very good time.”

Erica Belanger, senior family planning adviser at IPFF, added: “There is a particular crisis in the funding of contraceptive supplies. The actual product is not being funded to meet the growing demand that women and girls have for contraception.”

Beth Schlachter, executive director of FP2020, established after a previous family planning summit in 2012 to work with governments to meet their commitments, said it was very unlikely the US Congress would approve a budget with no money for family planning. But she added: “We remain in a period of incredible uncertainty.

“Funding issues are critical and an ongoing challenge for all of us to confront together. Countries and donors each have a role to play. At the same time, we don’t want to lose momentum in supporting countries to achieve their own goals. We can’t let that uncertainty draw focus from the growing number of country and partner commitments that are driving progress.”

Finance and health ministers and senior officials from the European commission are scheduled to attend Tuesday’s summit, which is hosted by the UK government, the UNFPA and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Discussions of the Mexico City policy are not on the agenda, but it is likely to cast a shadow over the meeting. The US is expected to send representatives.

Although not billed as a pledging conference, some new funding commitments are expected to be announced. The UK, the second largest bilateral donor for family planning, is expected to pledge extra money, as is the Gates Foundation. Canadian delegates are likely to use the conference to outline how their country plans to spend the $650m it has earmarked for reproductive health over the next three years.

Melinda Gates said the summit was coming at the right time. “Funding is being squeezed when we need it the most, because the biggest-ever generation of girls is entering adolescence,” she said. “If they are empowered to decide if and when to get pregnant, they can invest in themselves and their families. If they are not empowered, they may well be trapped in the same cycle of poverty as their parents.”

A number of companies are also expected to make announcements, which could include plans to fund family planning services to workers.

According to the Guttmacher Institute, the cost of meeting all women’s needs for modern contraception in poorer countries would cost $1.75 per person, per year, and would result in a 75% decline in unintended pregnancies, unplanned births and abortion annually.

Universal access to family planning is included in the sustainable development goals, adopted by 193 countries in 2015.