Peace for the World

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

Monday, July 10, 2017

Lost Leadership: The Three Mahanayakes Join The Kolam Dance Of The GMOA


Shyamon Jayasinghe
logoThe days of Ven Narada, Kotahene Pragnakeerthi, Yakkaduwe Prajnaratne, Madihe Pannaseeha, are gone it seems forever. The great line of tradition begun by Ven Sariyuth Mugalan disappears before our eyes. The Sanga is fast become a mere trailer attached to the corrupt political brigade.
Sri Lanka is full of political games these days than never before. It is Kolam theatre that we see because in the typical game the players hide under masks or pretences. The discerning sophisticate can see through the agenda but the undiscerning vast are beguiled into believing that what appears is what is. Take a good look at the recent warning by the three Mahanayakes in a joint statement and you will get what I mean.
Conspiring Cabal


The statement itself was a follow -up of the unilateral statement issued previously by the Holy One at Asgiriya. Hence, the hand of  conspirators in a widening game can be inferred. The conspirators tricked Asgiriya to come into the spider net and then, with enhanced confidence, went up to the other three Holy Ones and got them to sign up.
Our conspiring cabal are indeed ‘smart patriots,’ to use a phrase innovated by Dayan Jayatilleka. GMOA is already in their fold. GMOA, in turn, tried to rope in the trade unions in one collective assault on the government but hardened workers are street smart and they refused to be caught. Thus the GMOA’s ‘unending strikes,’ like the Permanent Revolution (nonewethena viplyavaya), keeps going sans the working class until they eventually get a backlash from the suffering people.
Unlike the GMOA, however, the monk platform has only one stated theme, and that is the preservation of the Sanga and Buddhism. The GMOA has the SAITM, the government international trade pacts and so on and any public policy matter they might think fit to include. When eminent economist Saman Kelegama passed away recently the GMOA even thought it appropriate to circulate an SMS that the Chief Architect of the trade pact with India has gone!
On the other hand, the Mahanayakes’ joint statement focused on the growing public shaming of the Sanga. The immediate provocation had been the public castigation of the doings and undoings of Gnanasara. Social media went viral on rampaging Buddhist monks. A simple mobile camera can capture misbehaviour and broadcast in an instant.
Professor Kapila Abhayawansa, formerly of the Pali and Buddhist University and currently teaching Buddhist philosophy in a Thailand university, wrote a brilliant piece that appeared in the Colombo Telegraph of July 6th. He has correctly spotted the game as he  questions whether the three Holy Ones’ statement is a pointer to the government or  a pointer to the Sasana?
The statement is supposed to protest at the trend of shaming of Buddhist monks by the public and  the social media etc and wants the government to stop the rot. This wave of criticism was provoked particularly after Gnanasara’s campaign to attack Muslims begun in 2013 and revived vehemently recently.
Listing Old Stories
Professor Kapila questions the Mahanayakes’ need for listing the destruction to Buddhist religious places, the smashing of Buddha statues and the theft of valuable archaeological  treasures buried in temples as among the untoward things happening today. These have been happening for many years in the past. The suggestion is that the widened list of undesirables has been meant to give a depth of context to Gnanasara’s BBS brigade and point the finger at the yahapalanaya government.
The Professor reminds us how even some Buddhist monks have been implicated in such destructive acts of theft around sacred places. There have been charges that monks have themselves been party to the  stealing of cash donations and tills in temples. One monk has been charged with giving such moneys on interest.
Auditing of Temple Money
It is no secret that we have numerous rich temples spread over the country. Kelaniya, Bellanvila, and Kandy are prime examples. Massive amounts of donations keep pouring in to these institutions. The Kalutara Bodhi has millions of passing travellers  emptying their pockets as an insurance for a good journey. These have been occurring for many years. The Kings of the past had donated massive assets to places of worship in the form of Nindagam, Devalagam, and Viharagam. The Asgiriya and Malwatte Chapters know that too well. I am not aware of any auditing of these donations that have ever been carried out in the face of such considerable cash handling.

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Sri Lanka monks vow to resist deal with Tamil minority

Sri Lanka radical monk Maagalkande Sudaththa said hardline Buddhists were mobilising Sri Lankans from the majority Sinhalese ethnic group to resist a new power-sharing arrangement being drafted by the government
Sri Lanka radical monk Maagalkande Sudaththa said hardline Buddhists were mobilising Sri Lankans from the majority Sinhalese ethnic group to resist a new power-sharing arrangement being drafted by the government
Sri Lanka's hardline monks on Monday broadened a growing campaign by the Buddhist clergy against the government, threatening street protests if the island's Tamil minority is granted greater autonomy.
Radical monk Maagalkande Sudaththa said hardline Buddhists were mobilising Sri Lankans from the majority Sinhalese ethnic group to resist a new power-sharing arrangement being drafted by the government.
"Monks are going from district to district to educate their followers about the dangers of the proposed constitution," Sudaththa told reporters in Colombo.
Last week the government vowed to enshrine in law a promised power-sharing agreement in Sri Lanka's Tamil-majority northern and eastern regions in exchange for a lasting peace.
President Maithripala Sirisena has stated he wants to prevent a repeat of the bloody separatist war that claimed 100,000 lives on the tiny island between 1972 and 2009.
The 225-member national parliament is currently drafting the legislation, but hardliners have vowed to take to the streets before the measures take effect.
"About 70 percent of MP's are asleep in parliament when important issues are discussed," Sudaththa said, accusing many of them of being "uneducated."
Sudaththa is an ardent supporter of firebrand monk Galagodaatte Gnanasara, who is on bail after being accused of hate speech and stoking violence against Sri Lanka's tiny Muslim population, the second largest minority after Tamils.
Nearly 70 percent of the island's population is Buddhist and the monks, who hold huge sway, have generally opposed any political concessions to Tamils.
The mounting opposition from the Buddhist clergy is seen as a challenge to Sirisena, also a Buddhist from the Sinhalese majority, who is committed to ethnic unity.
Hardline Sinhalese oppose a federal system that would ensure more political power for Tamil Sri Lankans.
The island's Tamils took up arms in 1972 against what they claimed was entrenched discrimination in education and employment.
These grievances expanded into a full-fledged war with the Tamil Tigers, a guerrilla rebel group, eventually controlling a third of Sri Lanka before being crushed in May 2009.
The brutal suppression of the Tigers movement caught civilians in the crossfire, with government forces accused of war crimes including the murder of at least 40,000 Tamil civilians.
Sirisena was elected to power partly on the back of support from Tamils, after he pledged reconciliation and promised investigations into war-time atrocities.

Farmers To Protest In Colombo

Farmers To Protest In Colombo

 Jul 10, 2017

The farming community is to gather in Colombo to stage a protest on July 26, the All Island Agrarian Services Confederation said.

Convener of the All Island Agrarian Services Confederation, Namal Karunaratne said that farmers will stage a protest in Polonnaruwa this week.
The farmers will raise concerns over the failure by the government to address some of their key concerns.
The farmers will later gather in Colombo on July 26 to stage a protest, Karunaratne said.
AshWaru Colombo

Gota signs affidavit to testify against two ex-Army officers before PRECIFAC

Former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa signed an affidavit before the Presidential Commission investigating alleged acts of Fraud Corruption, Abuse of Power, State Resources and Priviledges (PRECIFAC) yesterday to give evidence against two former senior Army officers, including an Army Commander another Army officer and a former high ranking state official.
They are former Army Commander Lt.Gen. Daya Ratnayake, Maj. Gen.Udaya Perera, Maj. Gen.Hathurusinghe and former Additional Defence Secretary Siripala Hettiarachchi.
The PRECIFAC is conducting investigations into an alleged multi million rupee mass scale fraud involving the cutting and removal of iron from the Kankesanthurai Cement factory situated in the High Security Zone during the Rajapaksa Regime.
The above mentioned former army officers and the state official have been named as respondents in this case.
Siripala Hettiarachchi in a statement to the commission had said that he made a written note sanctioning the removal of the stock of iron from the cement factory following specific instructions given by Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. 

Dengue crisis: Govt. insensitive to suffering of masses - priest 


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By Shamindra Ferdinando-July 9, 2017, 10:46 pm


The Catholic church yesterday alleged that public funds had been squandered on politicians and officials at the expense of the public at a time several districts were struggling to tackle fast spreading dengue.

Parish priest of St. Anne’s church, Kurana, Negombo Rev. Cyril Gamini Fernando, in his Sunday sermon, lambasted the government for being insensitive to the suffering of the masses.

Rev. Fernando was responding to yahapalana government last Friday obtaining parliamentary approval for a supplementary estimate amounting to about Rs 200 mn to purchase vehicles for two Ministers, Deputy Minister, Northern Governor, Presidential Secretariat and for diplomatic missions abroad.

Since the last parliamentary polls in August 2015, the government had obtained public funds on several occasions to acquire luxury vehicles for members of the UNP-SLFP coalition.

Security forces and police engage in anti-dengue operations in Colombo. Army headquarters says troops are supporting civil authorities and police to check houses in various parts of the city and its suburbs(Pics courtesy army media)

The former spokesman for the Catholic church said that immediate measures should be taken to arrest the situation. The priest urged the government to declare an emergency and take tangible measures without further delay or face the consequences.

Pointing out that hospitals had been overflowing with patients, the priest pointed out that foolish politicians and officials still seemed to be unaware of the crisis. Rev. Fernando emphasized that he was not engaged in party politics, but speaking on behalf of those those affected by dengue and their families.

The priest said that extravagant spending couldn’t be tolerated at a time the vast majority of people affected by the dengue epidemic lacked basic facilities.

Commenting on the situation in the Negombo area, Rev. Fernando said that there were dengue patients in many families. The government couldn’t absolve itself of the responsibility by forcing people to clean their garden, the priest said, while calling for divine intervention to help foolish politicians understand the gravity of the situation. They hadn’t still understood the fact that the country was facing an epidemic and if not controlled soon could cause a large number of deaths.

Nearly 240 men, women and children succumbed to dengue this year.

The priest also referred to hospital staff being affected by the disease against the backdrop of inefficient handling of the situation. Rev. Fernando faulted the public for not doing enough for anti-dengue campaign.

Arjun, Kirella roles in central expressway

Arjun, Kirella roles in central expressway

Jul 10, 2017

Higher education and highways minister Lakshman Kiriella submitted a cabinet paper last week to procure a contractor for the third phase construction of the Potuhera-Galagedara (32.5 km) stretch of the central expressway. However, there were no proper project report or environment impact assessment, and two fake reports had had hurriedly been arranged.

The acquisition of land for this stretch and compensation of payment have also come into question, according to area residents. The broker to find a contractor was former Central Bank governor Arjun Mahendran. The Japanese embassy has named M/S Taisei Corporation, M/S Penta Ocean Construction Ltd and M/S Wakachiku Construction Ltd. to take part in the bidding process by the UDA. Awarding of the Japan government funded project has been delayed due to continuous delays in the bidding process.
In this situation, the Japanese government has introduced M/S Fujita Corporation as the fourth bidder, purportedly to raise competitiveness. The cabinet paper says the pursuant competitiveness resulted in a reduction of the bids to Rs. 20 billion. A committee appointed by the cabinet evaluated the bids and recommended Taisei Corporation, but the Japanese government wanted Fujita too, included. Therefore, the ministerial committee on economic management decided to implement the project through a consortium.
Kiriella has submitted the cabinet paper dated 29 June 2017 to obtain proposals from the two companies and to seek approval for the awarding of the contract for the project.
Daya Nettasinghe

Revived lawsuit puts Palestine advocacy in crosshairs


A revived lawsuit filed in Chicago seems aimed not to hinder terrorism but to criminalize Palestine solidarity.John TaggartReuters

Charlotte Silver-10 July 2017

The case of a youth killed more than two decades ago – whose death prompted a tide of anti-terrorism litigation in the US – has returned to court.

In 1996, 17-year-old David Boim was standing at a bus stop in the Israeli settlement Beit El, near Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, when he was shot dead in a drive-by attack.

Eleven years earlier, David’s parents, Stanley and Joyce Boim, had moved to Jerusalem from New York. The whole family maintained dual American-Israeli citizenship.

In 2000, the Boims became the first US citizens to use federal anti-terrorism laws to accuse Islamic charities in the US of being fronts for a designated terrorist group (in this case, Hamas) in order to hold the organizations liable for the murder of their son.

Their civil lawsuit, which resulted in a $156 million award in damages in 2004, also helped the government bankrupt several of the country’s Islamic charities, including the largest such organization at the time, the Holy Land Foundation, and criminally prosecute its leaders.

Now the Boims are suing American Muslims for Palestine, a national advocacy group, and the affiliated Americans for Justice in Palestine Educational Foundation, arguing they are reincarnations of the defunct charities.

The Boims’ first lawsuit stretched over eight years and was full of holes that have yet to be filled. Their new lawsuit, filed last month in Chicago, suggests their goal is not to hinder terrorism, but to criminalize Palestine advocacy groups.

The case

Three days after David Boim was killed at the Israeli settlement, 24-year-old Amjad Hinawi turned himself in to the Palestinian Authority. Hinawi admitted that he was in the car with Khalil Sharif, also 24, when Sharif opened fire on Boim and the others standing at the bus stop, but maintained that he did not know Sharif’s plans.

Just a year after Boim’s slaying, Sharif, a member of Hamas who had evaded the Palestinian Authority’s attempts to find him, carried out a suicide attack in Jerusalem.

In February 1998, Hinawi was convicted by a Palestinian military court for being an accomplice in the slaying of Boim and sentenced to 10 years in prison with hard labor. Hinawi did not complete the prison time, however, because he absconded while on furlough shortly after he was sentenced. In 2005, he was killed by the Israeli military, which claimed he was reviving Hamas’ infrastructure in Nablus.

Hinawi’s conviction was not enough for the Boim family at the time.

In 1997, the Boims met Nathan Lewin, a lawyer who serves on the board of advisors of the Zionist Organization of America’s Center for Law and Justice. Lewin, who has also represented AIPAC and former president Richard Nixon, took on their case without charge and began aggressively lobbying for the US to obtain the extradition of Hinawi to face trial in the US and possibly the death penalty.

In public statements to the press and Congress, Lewin revealed that the FBI and the Justice Department pursued an investigation into Hinawi throughout 1999, with FBI agents traveling to Israel and the occupied Gaza Strip to meet with Palestinian and Israeli officials.

They concluded, however, that there was not enough admissible evidence to try Hinawi in a US court. One US official told Lewin that they couldn’t be certain that Hinawi’s confession hadn’t been coerced.

It was at this point, as Lewin tells the story, that he discovered a recourse for the Boim family in the form of the unused Anti-Terrorism Act. The legislation, passed by Congress in 1992, allows US citizens who are victims of acts the US government defines as terrorism to sue for civil damages in US courts.

“Obviously, there was no purpose in suing Mr. Hinawi, who had no funds,” Lewin told a Senate judiciary committee hearing on fighting the financing of terrorism in 2002.
Lewin and the Boims identified three US charities that they argued provided material support to Hamas.

Government gets on board

In their lawsuit filed in May 2000, the Boims claimed that the Holy Land Foundation, the Islamic Association for Palestine, activist Muhammad Salah and several other organizations and individuals had acted as a “network of front organizations” for a State Department-designated terror organization, Hamas, which they claimed was responsible for their son’s slaying.

Attorney John D. Shipman argues in a 2008 article for North Carolina Law Review that the Boims’ lawsuit was “the first to articulate a theory of terrorist liability based solely upon the defendants’ knowledge that their funds were being used to conduct acts of international terrorism.”

That liability could be imposed “at any point along the causal chain of terrorism,” according to the theory, no matter how far removed a group’s activities were from the acts of terrorism.

By the next year, the US government was working in tandem with the Boim lawsuit. In early December 2001, nearly three months after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, the US government accused the Holy Land Foundation of being a front for Hamas and seized its assets.
The move put the largest Islamic charity in the US out of business and imperiled its ability to hire lawyers.

In 2002, the US government threw its weight behind the Boims’ lawsuit. In a friend of the court brief, the US government urged the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals to allow the case to go to trial, arguing the Anti-Terrorism Act could be “an effective weapon in the battle against international terrorism.”

Boim was like a stalking horse to develop evidence to give to the federal government so they could bring criminal charges,” attorney Michael Deutsch told The Electronic Intifada.

Deutsch began representing defendant Muhammad Salah in 2004, when the US government indicted him for running “a US-based terrorist recruiting and financing cell associated with the foreign terrorist organization Hamas.”

During the summer of 2004, the federal government filed two separate lawsuits against defendants in the Boim lawsuit, the Holy Land Foundation and Muhammad Salah and Mousa Abu Marzouk. The government’s case drew heavily on the Boims’ lawsuit. The indictment against Salah and Abu Marzouk cited the Boims’ case. While the indictment against the Holy Land Foundation was sealed, the Boims filed supporting briefs in the case.

In December 2004, a jury awarded the Boims $52 million in damages that was automatically trebled to $156 million according to federal anti-terrorism laws.

Overwhelming offensive

The overlapping civil and federal cases against these organizations formed an overwhelming offensive, but the claim that the organizations were providing “material support” to Hamas was based on thin evidence, one piece of which was fabricated by the Israeli government.

In a letter to the same 2002 Senate judiciary committee hearing on fighting the financing of terrorism, John W. Boyd, the lawyer for the Holy Land Foundation at the time, rebutted the claims against his client.

According to Boyd, one of the most substantial pieces of evidence was fabricated by the Israeli government. Israel provided a supposed summary of a statement from the Holy Land Foundation’s manager in the West Bank, which attributed to him a confession that some of the foundation’s funds went to Hamas. According to Boyd, a factual transcript of the interview shows that the manager categorically denied that the Holy Land Foundation ever supported Hamas. Boyd stated that the government was aware of the error.

Another piece of evidence that purports to prove the foundation supported Hamas entities was the funding of a hospital in Gaza affiliated with Hamas. But this hospital received funding from USAID, a US government agency, at the same time the Holy Land Foundation was donating to it.

The Holy Land Foundation also gave money to Palestinian children who lost their fathers and were counted as orphans. Four hundred children received $45 per month from the Holy Land Foundation. These children’s fathers were killed for a variety of reasons: according to Boyd, only four fathers died in connection with alleged terrorism. Nine were killed by Hamas or other Palestinian organizations as suspected collaborators. Still, this program was cited as evidence that the Holy Land Foundation supported Hamas.

In 2007, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals voided the 2004 verdict that held the Holy Land Foundation and others liable, stating that the Boims had failed to prove that financial contributions to Hamas had played a direct role in the slaying of their son.

“Belief, assumption and speculation are no substitutes for evidence in a court of law … We must resist the temptation to gloss over error, admit spurious evidence and assume facts not adequately proved simply to side with the face of innocence and against the face of terrorism,” Judge Ilana Diamond Rovner wrote.

But the next year an expanded appellate panel reversed that decision.

Reviving the lawsuit

In the eight years between the start and end of the Boims’ case, the US “War on Terror” turned the courts into a front line in the fight against terrorism by supposedly attacking its revenue streams in the US.

“The practical effect of the Boim decision was to open American courtrooms to an entirely new class of litigants by explicitly recognizing a cause of action under the [Anti-Terrorism Act] for ‘aiding and abetting’ terrorism, even in cases where the defendant had no specific knowledge of the actual terrorist activity,” attorney Shipman explained in the North Carolina Law Review.

In the decade after the Boim case, several lawsuits were filed. Many were related to Palestine, targeting the Arab Bank, the Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organization for alleged acts of terrorism committed by people or groups loosely affiliated with them.
Palestine, however, was not the only issue being litigated under the various anti-terrorism laws passed in the 1990s.

The decade of litigation culminated in 2010, when the Obama administration took the Humanitarian Law Project, an organization dedicated to peacefully resolving conflicts, to the Supreme Court. Then-Attorney General Eric Holder argued it was illegal for a group to advise a designated terrorist organization – in this case the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Turkey – on how to reject violence and pursue its goals through lawful means.

According to law scholar David Cole, “The [Supreme] Court ruled – for the first time in its history – that speech advocating only lawful, nonviolent activity can be subject to criminal penalty, even where the speakers’ intent is to discourage resort to violence.”

On 12 May of this year, the Boims went back to court in Chicago. Claiming they received a small fraction of the damages they were awarded, the parents are now naming three individuals and American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) as responsible for paying the rest of the money they are owed. An exact amount has not been specified.

The new lawsuit claims that Rafeeq Jaber, Abdelbasset Hamayel and Osama Abu Irshaid established AMP, and a nonprofit funding arm, Americans for Justice in Palestine Educational Foundation (AJP), to replace the three organizations found liable for supporting Hamas in 2004.

“AMP and AJP are alter egos and successors of HLF [the Holy Land Fund], AMS [American Muslim Society] and IAP [Islamic Association for Palestine], and are therefore liable for the unpaid portion of the Boim Judgment,” the complaint argues.

The lawsuit does not purport to have any evidence that AMP or the other named defendants are supporting Hamas. Indeed, AMP says it does not conduct any activities abroad.

Nevertheless, the Boims argue that AMP has the “identical” agenda as its alleged predecessors.
“AMP claims on its website that it is ‘all about educating people about Palestine,’ thus continuing the purported purposes of AMS, IAP and HLF,” the complaint states.

Jaber, Hamayel and Abu Irshaid are named because they all had some role in the previously indicted organizations and now work with AMP. None of them was indicted or named in the previous lawsuit.

AMP was founded in 2006 in Chicago with the “sole purpose” to “educate the American public and media about issues related to Palestine and its rich cultural and historical heritage.” It collaborates with groups around the country, including Jewish Voice for Peace, to organize educational events and actions in support of Palestinian rights and the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement.

“They’re trying to say that this is the same group with a different name, but it’s a different group, different philosophy, goals and people,” Deutsch told The Electronic Intifada.

“It’s a continuing attack on Muslim Palestinians.”

Deutsch, who is not representing AMP but is familiar with the case, said that “the whole impetus behind the Boim case was to destroy charitable groups that were helping those suffering under Israeli occupation.

“This is just a continuation of this. They’re going after this group that is successful and active.”
The Boims’ lawyer, Stephen Landes, said allowing AMP to operate “makes a mockery” of federal anti-terrorism laws.

American Muslims for Palestine declined to give a comment for this article.

The Boim case is being revived just as the Trump administration says it will prioritize fighting what it calls terrorism in the US and abroad. How the court handles the resurrection of this precedent-setting lawsuit could usher in a new wave of phony terrorism cases targeting Palestinian activism.


Charlotte Silver is Associate Editor for The Electronic Intifada.

Palestinian Authority crackdown on media raises alarm among journalists


West Bank journalists say restrictions on media, including arrests and blocking websites, are resulting in increasing self-censorship

EPA photographer Abed al-Hashlamoun after being injured by stun grenades thrown by Israeli forces during a protest in support of Palestinian prisoners (AFP)

Jacob Burns-Monday 10 July 2017
Journalists and media rights activists have warned that the arrest of a journalist by the Palestinian security forces last week points to new attempts to drastically restrict journalism in the West Bank.
Jihad Barakat, a journalist with the Palestine Today channel, was arrested on Friday near a checkpoint in Tulkarem after filming the convoy of the Prime Minister, Rami Hamdallah.
According to a statement from Addameer, a prisoners’ rights group providing legal representation to Barakat, he was arrested by the Palestinian preventative security force, and was held without access to lawyer until Saturday morning.
“Despite attempts by Addameer’s attorney to obtain information about him and to visit him since his arrest, the legal advisor in Tulkarem denied that Barakat was seized by PA security forces,” the statement read.
After his lawyer was allowed access, he was released on bail on Sunday, but is due to face trial in September on a varied list of charges.
These include “behaving in a manner contrary to the manners of a public place”, “panhandling” and “presence in a place in time or conditions from which it is inferred that the presence is illegal or improper.”
Barakat is not the only West Bank journalist to be recently arrested. A cameraman for Al Aqsa TV, a Hamas-linked station, is still in detention after being arrested on 1 July. Taher al-Shamali was detained, and then released, in June after using Facebook to criticise Jibril Rajoub, a powerful politician.
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“Since the beginning of June, when Trump met with [PA President Mahmoud] Abbas and there was the conference in Saudi Arabia, we have seen a big increase in the violations against journalists," said Omar Nazzal, head of the Palestinian Journalists’ Union.
"In June, for the first time, the number of violations the PA committed against journalists was triple that the number the Israelis committed.”
Other journalists told MEE that the situation had become worse recently for journalists in the West Bank, and the result of this was increasing self-censorship.
One West Bank journalist, who asked not to be named in order to discuss the matter without fear of reprisal, said he is now scared to do his job.
“I’m so afraid of putting anything on social media now,” he said. “And I’m so careful about making stories in what might be sensitive locations, such as Balata refugee camp.”
He said he felt anything could lead to arrest, citing colleagues who had been arrested for social media postings, as well as stories they had filed.
“The arrests of journalists are not legal under Palestine’s basic laws,” said Musa al-Rimawi, coordinator of the Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms (MADA). “The reason appears to be the split between Fatah and Hamas, but we are demanding that journalists be left out of this tension."
Rimawi also pointed to the recent blocking of 29 websites in the West Bank and a recently passed “Electronic Crimes” law whose provisions have not been made public as additional indicators of a shrinking space for the press.
“It’s really scary that they didn’t publish the law – this has led to fear and worry in civil society,” Rimawi said.

'A violation of the law'

Palestinian journalists have long faced harassment and arrest by the Israeli authorities. Gazan journalists also face severe restrictions on their freedom of expression from Hamas, the de facto rulers of the besieged enclave. One Gazan journalist is currently imprisoned by Hamas.
But the Electronic Crimes law has brought worries over press freedom in PA-controlled areas to new heights.
“The PA passed this law without even discussing it with the journalists who will be most affected by it,” said Nazzal. “This is in itself a violation of the law.”
The first websites were blocked by the PA on 12 June, with more following in the days after. All those affected are perceived as being close to Hamas or Mohammed Dahlan, an exiled Fatah rival of Abbas.
Among the blocked websites is Quds News Network, a popular outlet that describes itself as objective and youth-driven.
Iyad al-Rifai, the head of the Quds News Network, told MEE that his company had not received any warning of the decision to block the website in the West Bank.
“We haven’t received any formal decision to ban our website, and we don’t know officially who’s behind it. But we learnt from internet companies that the decision came from the Attorney General.”
Rifai said the company had filed an appeal against the block, and was looking at technical solutions that may allow them to work around it.
The violations of the PA have become much bigger than those of the Israelis
-Musa al-Rimawi, Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms
The office of the Attorney General did not respond to a request for comment when contacted by MEE.

Unpopular leadership

A Palestinian official told the Maan news agency that the websites had been blocked for publishing false news, and that cases were pending against them.
“The violations of the PA have become much bigger than those of the Israelis,” said al-Rimawi. “We are really worried about freedom of expression in Palestine.”
The term of the Palestinian president, Abbas, was supposed to end in 2009, but the split between Fatah in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza has meant that no national elections have been held since 2005.
A March study by the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research showed 64 percent of Palestinians support for his resignation.
As the president has grown increasingly unpopular, Palestinian security forces have clamped down on those they view as political opponents, particularly those associated with Hamas or Dahlan.
“It is very clear that regional developments mean the PA has had to commit to a new political path,” said Nazzal. “This means that they have to oppress any voice that opposes their policy.”

Cypriot president says wants zero forces, guarantees from Turkey

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades talks during a news conference at the Presidential Palace in Nicosia, Cyprus July 10, 2017. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou

By Michele Kambas | ATHENS-Mon Jul 10, 2017

President of Cyprus Nicos Anastasiades said on Monday he remained ready to negotiate a peace deal with estranged Turkish Cypriots and Turkey, after U.N.-backed talks ended in acrimony last week.

The talks, sponsored by Greece, Turkey and Britain as well as the United Nations, failed to reach a deal to end a conflict that has dragged on for decades and which is a source of friction between Greece and Turkey.

"What I want to make absolutely clear ... (is that) the Greek Cypriot side is ready to negotiate a solution within the parameters set by the United Nations Secretary General," Anastasiades told a news conference.

He said he was still ready to negotiate a deal based on a timetable for the full withdrawal of Turkish troops from the north of the divided island and a commitment from Turkey that it will cease intervening in Cypriot affairs.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades talks during a news conference at the Presidential Palace in Nicosia, Cyprus July 10, 2017. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou

The latest of many attempts to broker an accord on Cyprus ended on July 7 after 10 days of negotiations at a Swiss Alpine resort attended by the Greek and Turkish Cypriot sides along with Britain, Greece and Turkey.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called a halt after what diplomats said was a particularly charged debate over a dinner that stretched on through the night.

Anastasiades said that, during negotiations, Guterres was given the impression Turkey would be flexible on both the issue of Turkish intervention and the presence of its armed forces in Cyprus. But Turkey would not commit to those positions in writing, Anastasiades said.

Cyprus was split after a Turkish invasion that was triggered by a brief Greek-inspired coup in 1974. The seeds of division were sown years earlier after a power-sharing arrangement between Greek and Turkish Cypriots crumbled as a constitutional deadlock led to violence.

A settlement to the long-simmering conflict has been given sharper focus by the prospect of sizeable deposits of natural gas in the eastern Mediterranean.

Anastasiades, who runs an internationally-recognized Greek Cypriot Government, said attempts to search for gas deposits would go on despite opposition from Turkey, which disputes those rights.
"We are continuing our energy program according to schedule," he said.

Following the talks' collapse, it was unclear what further efforts the U.N. might undertake to resolve the conflict.

While conceding failure, Anastasiades said islanders should strive for independence even without help from third parties.

"I want to tell Greek and Turkish Cypriots that we should unite and look at the prospects of independence, of true independence and integrity of the Republic of Cyprus as an EU member state which ensures the rights of all," he said.


(Editing by Catherine Evans)

How Paul Manafort Helped Buy Washington Influence for Putin Crony

Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman used an obscure think tank to make D.C. connections for Viktor Yanukovych.
How Paul Manafort Helped Buy Washington Influence for Putin Crony
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In May 2013, the Republican lobbyist Vin Weber welcomed Serhiy Klyuyev, one of Ukraine’s most powerful political operatives, to Washington. For two days, Weber squired the member of parliament around Capitol Hill to spread the message that then-Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was leading his country on the path to reform and was seeking to embrace the West.

Klyuyev had come to Washington as part of a lobbying campaign carried out on behalf of an obscure Brussels-based think tank, the European Centre for a Modern Ukraine (ECFMU), which was founded by veterans of Yanukovych’s Party of Regions. On the recommendation of Paul Manafort, President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman who worked as a political fixer for Yanukovych, ECFMU hired two powerhouse Washington lobbying firms, the Podesta Group and Mercury LLC.

Working with Manafort and his deputy, the two firms pushed Yanukovych’s agenda in Washington, but none at the time documented their work under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) — passed to counter the influence of foreign propaganda on American politics. In the controversy that has ensued since Trump’s victory and allegations that Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Podesta, Mercury, and Manafort’s firm have all conceded that their work benefited the Ukrainian government and have filed paperwork under FARA.

Interviews with individuals who met Podesta and Mercury lobbyists, federal disclosures, and sources close to the two firms describe a lobbying campaign that presented Yanukovych as a reform-minded leader ready to march out from under Russia’s shadow and into the arms of the European Union. Crucially, however, working on behalf of ECFMU created the impression that Podesta and Mercury were not lobbying on behalf of the Ukrainian government but an independent entity. The distinction allowed both Mercury and Podesta to register under less stringent lobbying disclosure rules and reveal less information to the public.

Moreover, ECFMU provides the link between Manafort’s work as a political fixer in Ukraine from 2012 to 2014 and the promotion of Yanukovych’s interests in Washington. “In retrospect, it’s fair to call ECFMU a front group for the Party of Regions to set up a lobbying operation in D.C.,” said one source familiar with the campaign.

Manafort’s lobbying firm, DMP International, maintains in disclosures filed last week that he only provided “advice” to ECFMU, but sources close to Mercury and Podesta dispute that account. Two individuals speaking on condition of anonymity and familiar with the lobbying efforts told Foreign Policy that Manafort and his deputy, Rick Gates, were in regular contact with Podesta and Mercury lobbyists to discuss the lobbying campaign on behalf of ECFMU. Emails obtained by The Associated Press last year claim that “Gates personally directed the work” of Mercury and Podesta and that Manafort helped coordinate the effort by phone.

“Paul’s primary focus was always directed at domestic Ukrainian political campaign work,” Jason Maloni, a spokesman for Manafort, said in a statement.

Spokesmen for both firms rejected the description of ECFMU as a front for the Party of Regions and said they relied on assurances from Ina Kirsch, the director of the center, that it did not have connections to Yanukovych’s political operation. Kirsch did not respond to questions from FP.

The FBI is now examining Manafort’s work for Yanukovych as part of its wide-ranging probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and whether any Trump aides conspired with that effort.
Set up in 2012, ECFMU ostensibly was founded to advocate for closer ties between Ukraine and the European Union. The think tank’s website is nowdefunct, but when it was up and running, it listed a mere two staff members. The source of the group’s funding remains unclear, but Ukrainian investigative journalists uncovered evidence indicating that it was backed at high levels by the Party of Regions. Efforts to reach its founders were unsuccessful.

In meetings beginning in 2012 with Washington officials, journalists, NGO officials, and think tank researchers, Podesta and Mercury lobbyists working for ECFMU sought to downplay human rights concerns in Ukraine — principally over the detention of opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko. They also sought to portray Yanukovych as a bona fide reformer and secure support in Washington for a so-called association agreement between Ukraine and the EU, which would move Kiev out of Moscow’s orbit.

The lobbying campaign relied on about a dozen operatives spread across both firms and targeted the Washington foreign-policy establishment. Podesta and Mercury employees met with staff and senior lawmakers on Capitol Hill and administration officials in the White House and State Department.

Despite concerns over Yanukovych’s human rights record and corruption issues, the lobbyists found an opening to bind Washington closer to Kiev. “We weren’t really buying the line that we should ignore the human rights concerns,” said a former State Department official who met with Podesta lobbyists and requested anonymity to describe the meeting. “But we didn’t want to turn our back on Ukraine.”

On Capitol Hill, aides perceived the campaign as a run-of-the-mill lobbying effort. While in Washington, Klyuyev met with Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.), the co-founder of the Congressional Natural Gas Caucus, and later traveled to his Pennsylvania district, a hot spot of shale gas production. Ukraine at the time was eager to develop its own shale gas resources. “This kind of thing happens all the time,” said one Murphy aide.

Concerns over corruption, human rights, and governance had made European officials leery of propping the door wide open to Ukrainian EU membership. But the lobbyists’ message to Washington was, “Don’t let that get in the way of bringing Ukraine into the fold,” said one of the sources familiar with the lobbying effort.

“Another way to look at it could be to say that the campaign was trying to whitewash the terrifically corrupt and kleptocratic system that Yanukovych was running at the time and put a friendly face on it when in fact it was something very different,” said Hannah Thoburn, a research fellow at the Hudson Institute.

Individuals who met with Podesta lobbyists say there was little doubt that the firm was working on behalf of the Yanukovych government, with ECFMU as their ostensible client. “They were actually very upfront about the fact that this group was connected to the government,” said one former Barack Obama administration official, who requested anonymity to describe the encounter.

“It was clear they were representing the Ukrainian government,” said the head of a Washington advocacy group.

A spokesperson for Podesta said its employees at all times made clear that their client was ECFMU, not the Ukrainian government.

As Mercury and Podesta made friends for Kiev in Washington, Yanukovych attempted to play the EU and Russia against one another. The Ukrainian leader gave the EU the impression he would sign an association agreement to bind his country to the union, all the while demanding additional financial support from Brussels. Under intense pressure from Moscow and promises of financial aid and lower gas prices, Yanukovych balked at the last minute.

When he refused to sign the EU deal at a summit meeting in Vilnius, Lithuania, on Nov. 29, 2013, Ukrainians poured into city streets in protest, and the resulting popular uprising soon toppled Yanukovych and laid bare his regime’s fantastic corruption.

Documents revealed Klyuyev, the parliamentarian whom Weber had shepherded around Capitol Hill, as the owner of the president’s fantasyland estate, Mezhyhirya, complete with a private zoo, a collection of rare cars, and even a pirate ship. Ukrainian prosecutors have accused Klyuyev and his brother, who served as Yanukovych’s chief of staff, of fraud related to illegal privatizations and failing to repay loans in excess of $500 million.

Described by anti-corruption activists as one of the masterminds of Yanukovych’s kleptocracy, Klyuyev fled the country in 2015 before he could be arrested. That year, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned Klyuyev’s brother, Andriy, for his role in raiding Ukrainian state coffers.
Serhiy Leshchenko, a crusading Ukrainian journalist and now a member of parliament, described the Klyuyev brothers as Yanukovych’s “most loyal and permanent allies.”

“They were architects of Yanukovych’s autocracy and widespread corruption,” Leshchenko said. “They were not only political partners but also in business with Yanukovych.”

Even if their campaign had been for naught, ECFMU represented good business for Podesta and Mercury. Podesta netted $1.2 million for the work; Mercury took home $720,000. In his FARA disclosure filed last week, Manafort revealed that he received more than $17 million in payments from Yanukovych’s Party of Regions.

Podesta, Mercury, and Manafort all maintain that they followed the law in disclosing their lobbying activities, and they are unlikely to face legal consequences for failing to immediately register as foreign agents. The Justice Department historically does not prosecute FARA violators and works to bring them into compliance with the law, rather than filing charges.

In the months since Trump’s election, Manafort has become a liability for the president. The Republican operative’s work on behalf of Yanukovych, currently in exile in Russia, has become a prime example of Trump’s connections to pro-Kremlin figures.

And while Manafort took on lucrative work for a politician now recognized as a Kremlin pawn, there’s a certain irony to the campaign he helped organize: Podesta and Mercury’s Washington operation aimed to bring Ukraine toward the EU and away from Russia, undermining a Kremlin foreign-policy objective.

That lobbying campaign bought the Yanukovych regime time to make its case at high levels of the U.S. government — and Ukrainian officials absolutely loved it. On visits to Washington, Yanukovych’s foreign minister, Leonid Kozhara, would brag about how his government’s lobbying efforts had opened doors, said Anders Aslund, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and a well-connected expert on Russian and Ukrainian affairs.

“He boasted how extremely good relations they had with both parties thanks to Podesta and Mercury,” Aslund said. “He loved it that he had all this access. It was all about getting access.”
Kozhara was one of the founders of the ECFMU.

Photo credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images