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 17, 2017

secrets; when will we ever know?

2017-07-18
Cricket lovers in Sri Lanka might not be happy with the clash between the two legends of the game, former captains Kumar Sangakkara and Arjuna Ranatunga the current Minister of Petroleum and Renewable Resources. They are indirectly levelling serious allegations against each other, which if proved, would definitely ruin their hard earned reputations.   
Raising a question on the 2009 Tour of Pakistan where the players had to face a horrendous terrorist attack, Sangakkara for some reason first called for an inquiry into why the team was sent to Pakistan when there were no proper answers to security concerns and asked as to who was responsible for arranging the tour. Arjuna, as he is fondly called in Sri Lanka even by school children, in spite of his age, retaliated by calling for a similar investigation on the circumstances that led to the Sri Lankan team’s defeat in the 2011 World Cup final against India. He had said he could not reveal what happened during the finals, but would reveal the truth “someday.”   
It is very clear that they are implicitly accusing each other for the two debacles. Sangakkara must explain to the cricket crazy country on grounds for calling for an investigation on the ill-fated Pakistan tour and even more important, as to what made him not raise this issue for the past eight years, if he had evidence to suggest that the authorities made a reckless decision to send the team to Pakistan.   
Arjuna’s statement was more serious. Does he imply that the 2011 final against India was fixed? And since he made this statement in retaliation to Sangakkara’s call for a probe on the Pakistan tour he further implies that Sangakkara was involved in whatever he claims. He too has to explain to the country the reasons behind this statement and why he is unable to reveal what he knew about the match at the time it happened or for so long.   
It also raises several other questions as well. If Sangakkara had not called for an inquiry on the Pakistan tour, would Arjuna have called for an inquiry on the 2011 final, irrespective of having evidence or at least doubts of foul play? Going by the statement made by Arjuna, his call for a probe on the 2011 final seems to be conditional. “If Mr. Sangakkara wants an inquiry into the tour of Pakistan then they should have one. But I think we should also inquire into what happened to the Sri Lanka team during the 2011 World Cup final,” he said. Then the question remains whether it is proper for the World-Cup-winning captain not to reveal what he knows about an important event in Sri Lankan cricket history, without waiting for “someday.” Isn’t he ignoring his responsibility towards cricket in particular and to the country at large?   
By the way, to digress a bit from the main subject, but to strike a relevant point, we would like to point out that threatening to reveal secrets hasbeen a tool used by many important or famous people as a means of silencing the critics. We can cite two more important recent cases as examples of this kind of action. One was the threat by President Maithripala Sirisena to reveal secrets “in the event” the Mahinda Rajapaksa loyalists formed a new political party, and the other being that of Bodu Bala Sena Chief Ven. Galagodatte Gnanasara Thera’s announcement in 2013 to reveal “in due course” the names of 11 major heroin importers of whom nine he said were Muslims.   
The joint opposition has formed a new political party, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), but the President has so far failed to reveal the secrets he was supposed to hold. And the “due course” has not arrived yet for the BBS to reveal the names of the big-time heroin dealers.   
The secrets that the President hinted at must be important to the country, as otherwise there was no point in threatening the Mahinda loyalists by threatening to reveal them. Revealing the names of large-scale heroin dealers is no doubt very important and a must, if some one has any information about it. These and the secrets held by our cricket legends are not things to reveal on certain conditions as the only condition for them to be revealed is whether they are in the interests of the country and its people.  

Cricket chiefs who removed Laborers’ trousers shamelessly caught with their trousers down degradingly..! Never did SL cricket descend to this lowliest level !!


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 17.July.2017, 11.30PM)   It is an incontrovertible fact that Sri Lanka’s  cricket is currently going through a bad patch .Whatever that is attempted only reaps sad and bad results. So is the ‘One Nation One Cricket’ slogan  which has also  not produced any unity. It is in such a muddle  the Vice presidents , coaches and captains have resigned. The coach who is remaining is only an interim coach . The administration too is an interim one.   
Though the sports minister and players are holding media briefings and glorifying  themselves , the truth of the matter is those are all noisy flatulence and empty of substance. The sports minister who disdains the tummy size  of the players does exercises in the morning and evening  to attract  media publicity , while Lasith Malinga raises his shirt and  displays his tummy to the media. This is cricket in Sri Lanka (SL) now! 
Lasith Malinga  despite his brags and braggadocios clearly demonstrated  his incompetence as a bowler when he  bagged only three wickets in the five matches he played with Zimbabwe , the team that is ranked 11 th in international cricket .
Sanath Jayasuriya who is  considered as cool and a laughing stock   by the world is to  continue as chairman of selection committee  for  some time.  Sanath dancing to the tunes of Sumathipalas  and Shammis  by  promoting and bringing  in players whom they fancy , at once axes players against whom they have a dislike. It is based on these reasons  Shanuka  who was  playing in England was got down suddenly during the period of Rajapakses.

Arjuna even as he condemns Charlie transacts illicit deals with Nishantha.

Shammis  who are  pointing an accusing finger at Charlie Austin on  manager mafia of players has himself commenced a players’ manager base putting Nasoom Azar in the front under a sly arrangement .Rob Ashwell , Asanka Wijewardena , Roshan Abeysinghe , Ravi De Silva , Thushil Gunasekera and Mohomed are offshoots of this mafia.

It is only a few who  know that notorious Nishantha Ranatunge the brother of Arjuna Ranatunge was the first manager of Dinesh Chandimal , though Arjuna is launching a verbal onslaught on Austin Charlie  .During those days , Nishantha using Chandimal tried to get Sangakkara and Mahela into his net , but that proved futile. Arjuna who is castigating Gamini Lokuge over the television deal , does not speak about the illicit deal transacted by his brother Nishantha with CSN , and the shady deal with the  Nimbus local agent Hashan Thilakaratne  to arrive at  an amicable settlement with Nimbus in respect of the legal proceedings.

Thilanga being a book maker  -was the defeat faced against Zimbabwe hinged on his bet ?

Arjuna revealed , a cricket chief in SL earned many millions of rupees because of SL team’s  unexpected defeat at the hands of   Zimbabwe . He was referring to Thilanga and nobody else. Though it is in the name of Thilanga’s brother the business affairs are  conducted , the family of Thilanga are also partners in one of  the two main  bookie business ventures alias betting centers  in SL. Even while there is a ban imposed by the ICC that  such an individual cannot hold a post in the cricket association , and the sports Act provisions too  prohibit , yet Thilanga is in the hot seat  of the cricket association  as well as he is a member of  the executive committee of the ICC.

It is not wrong if doubts have proliferated because  Thilanga the unscrupulous book maker during the recent past manipulated to win the bet, the SL team lost to Zimbabwe. Perhaps Arjuna is well aware  of Thilanga’s  rackets more than others  because Thilanga was at one time a bosom pal of Arjuna who introduced Thilanga to the cricket association for the first time. Yet Arjuna instead of taking the bull by the horns is only stooping to the lowliest levels , and planting his rotten brinjal in others’  gardens. 
Thilanga who has the patronage of the president even if he  hasn’t  prime minister’s , exploiting that to the full has nearly completed two years as chairman via  the interim committee without any issue despite all the rackets. 
Thilanga  is using president’s daughter Chaturika as a tool to fix all his problems after  entrusting the cricket association publicity  worth  many millions of rupees to  the advertising  Co. ‘ Media gang’ belonging to Chaturika . All the publicity that was done earlier by the cricket association’s  media and trade division is being carried out at very exorbitant  costs by “ Media Gang’’ and “Shift’’ advertising agencies  . 
Now the cricket association at  every religious function publishes greetings and goodwill  messages   in all newspapers   . In the advertisement published by the cricket association last Poson Poya  there were a number of printing mistakes.  ‘Anubudhu’  Theras was printed as ‘Ahubudhu’ Theras. Those advertisements were prepared by Chaturika’s ‘Media Gang’ 
In addition ,recently the cricket association sacrificed Rs. 50 million of its funds  to two temples . Though the Daily Mirror published it , the sports minister could not notice that as much as  he noticed  the tummies of players . 

Chiefs who removed Laborers’ trousers shamelessly caught with their trousers down degradingly .. 

While wasting association funds on an unprecedented profligate scale  , Thilangas indulged in yet another disgraceful and despicable activity  at the end of the Zimbabwe – SL  tournament. They removed the trousers of the laborers who were employed on a temporary basis on a daily wage of Rs. 1000.00 per laborer. These laborers were employed to cover the turf .
 
It is a practice to provide these laborers with a Tee shirt and a ‘bottom’, apart  from the daily payment to them  because of the television cameras which may capture them . The cricket association which finds a sponsor for that , has never ever taken back the dress given to them in the past. But on this occasion the 125 laborers were forced to return the ‘bottoms’ they were wearing if they were to be paid their daily wages. This order came from Association’s  very top echelon. These poor laborers having no choice had returned their bottoms and gone home only with their underwear because this came as a surprise to them. 
Following the humiliating defeat SL faced at the hands of Zimbabwe  a team ranked very low in international cricket , it is the trousers as well as the jockstraps  of the cricket association chiefs - the disgraceful  zeros who proudly parade as great heroes which  should have been removed . Instead these shameless lokkas (chiefs) have removed the ‘bottoms’  of the poor laborers , and mind you that order has come from the association’s very  ‘top’  .

It must therefore be first examined  whether those at the Association’s ‘top’ (they  haven’t anything inside at their  top of course is well known !)  haven’t anything even at the bottom  going by the inordinate concern shown by them to  the ‘bottoms’ of the laborers .  This is because no sane employer unless he is bottomless himself would take back  forcibly the ‘ bottoms’ of the poor laborers under him.
When the media exposed this disgraceful episode which was the result of  Thilanga’s evil  proposition , the CEO Ashley De Silva who gave that instruction to  Sooriyawewa playground officials ,and another bloke by the name of Jerome Jayaratne holding a post were however saved , after blaming the incident on a minor officer of  the Western province.  The employees of the cricket association pointed out  , when Jerome was the chief of the coaching division he was nicknamed ‘kalisama’ because he wore shorts when he came to work.  Therefore  the same ‘kalisama’ ordering  the removal of the trousers of the poor laborers is a most abominable joke , they pinpointed .

SL cricket has reached the lowliest levels –has hit rock bottom !

The decline in the performance of   SL women’s cricket team which was maintaining a high  position in tests , one day and 20-20 games in world tournaments – now ranked eighth is another indication  of the disastrous state of SL ‘s cricket . Can the cricket standard of SL descend any lower than this ?
In the circumstances it is the president of the association , CEO and the sports minister who were   caught well and truly with not only their trousers  but even their jockstraps down. No wonder the whole cricket arena is stinking.  The worst part ? Unbelievably  , it is these same villains who have removed the trousers of the poor innocent laborers . But in the end  , it is the cricket fans watching  their favorite game breaking rest who will have to go without  their pants – robbed by these villains . 
Meanwhile Arjuna who has always been fishing in troubled waters is now making sly moves while claiming loudly  he can extricate  SL’s cricket from its present plight and predicament . Next report will be about Arjuna

BY Lanka e news special reporter 

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by     (2017-07-17 18:44:19)

Welcome: A letter from Mahmoud Darwish


Mahmoud Darwish-
APA images
Mahmoud Darwish - 17 July 2017

The renowned Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish was the first writer that the Palestine Festival of Literature approached with a request to be a Founding Patron. He accepted. He was due to speak at PalFest’s inaugural event in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah in May 2008 but medical reasons prevented him from attending. He sent a letter instead. Darwish passed away three months later in August.

The English translation of his 2008 letter features as the opening piece of This Is Not a Bordera newly published collection of essays, diaries and poems marking a decade of PalFest. Darwish’s letter appears online here for the first time.
Dear Friends,

I regret that I cannot be here today, to receive you personally.

Welcome to this sorrowing land, whose literary image is so much more beautiful than its present reality. Your courageous visit of solidarity is more than just a passing greeting to a people deprived of freedom and of a normal life; it is an expression of what Palestine has come to mean to the living human conscience that you represent. It is an expression of the writer’s awareness of his role: a role directly engaged with issues of justice and freedom. The search for truth, which is one of a writer’s duties, takes on – in this land – the form of a confrontation with the lies and the usurpation that besiege Palestine’s contemporary history; with the attempts to erase our people from the memory of history and from the map of this place.

We are now in the 60th year of the Nakba. There are now those who are dancing on the graves of our dead, and who consider our Nakba their festival. But the Nakba is not a memory; it is an ongoing uprooting, filling Palestinians with dread for their very existence. The Nakba continues because the occupation continues. And the continued occupation means a continued war. This war that Israel wages against us is not a war to defend its existence, but a war to obliterate ours.

The conflict is not between two “existences,” as the Israeli discourse claims. The Arabs have unanimously offered Israel a collective peace proposal in return for Israel’s recognition of the Palestinians’ right to an independent state. But Israel refuses.

Dear friends, in your visit here you will see the naked truth. Yesterday, we celebrated the end of apartheid in South Africa. Today, you see apartheid blossoming here most efficiently. Yesterday, we celebrated the fall of the Berlin Wall. Today, you see the wall rising again, coiling itself like a giant snake around our necks. A wall – not to separate Palestinians from Israelis, but to separate Palestinians from themselves, and from any view of the horizon. Not to separate history from myth, but to weld together history and myth with a racist ingenuity.

Life here, as you see, is not a given, it’s a daily miracle. Military barriers separate everything from everything. And everything – even the landscape – is temporary and vulnerable. Life here is less than life, it is an approaching death. And how ironic that the stepping up of oppression, of closures, of settlement expansion, of daily killings that have become routine – that all this takes place in the context of what is called the “peace process;” a process revolving in an empty circle, threatening to kill the very idea of peace in our suffering hearts.

Peace has two parents: Freedom and Justice. And occupation is the natural begetter of violence. Here, on this slice of historic Palestine, two generations of Palestinians have been born and raised under occupation. They have never known another – normal – life. Their memories are filled with images of hell. They see their tomorrows slipping out of their reach. And though it seems to them that everything outside this reality is heaven, yet they do not want to go to that heaven. They stay, because they are afflicted with hope.

In this difficult condition of history, Palestinian writers live. Nothing distinguishes them from their countrymen – nothing except one thing: that writers try to gather the fragments of this life and of this place in a literary text; a text they try to make whole.

I have spoken before of how difficult it is to be Palestinian, and how difficult it is for a Palestinian to be a writer or a poet. On the one hand you have to be true to your reality, and on the other you have to be faithful to your literary profession. In this zone of tension between the long “State of Emergency” and between his literary imagination, the language of the poet moves. He has to use the word to resist the military occupation. And he has to resist – on behalf of the word – the danger of the banal and the repetitive. How can he achieve literary freedom in such slavish conditions? And how can he preserve the literariness of literature in such brutal times?

The questions are difficult. But each poet or writer has their own way of writing themselves and their reality. The one historic condition does not produce the one text – or even similar texts, for the writing selves are many and different. Palestinian literature does not fit into ready-made molds.

Being Palestinian is not a slogan, it is not a profession. The Palestinian is a human being, a tormented human being who has daily questions, national and existential, who has a love story, who contemplates a flower and a window open to the unknown. Who has a metaphysical fear, and an inner world utterly resistant to occupation.

A literature born of a defined reality is able to create a reality that transcends reality – an alternative, imagined reality. Not a search for a myth of happiness to flee from a brutal history, but an attempt to make history less mythological, to place the myth in its proper, metaphorical place, and to transform us from victims of history, into partners in humanizing history.

My friends and colleagues, thank you for your noble act of solidarity. Thank you for your brave initiative to break the psychological siege inflicted upon us. Thank you for resisting the invitation to dance on our graves. Know that we are still here; that we still live.

8 May 2008

Afghanistan: civilian deaths at record high in 16-year war, says UN

Child deaths rise 9% and casualties among women are up 23%, says report that cites Taliban’s homemade bombs as main cause

A large explosion in front of the German embassy in Kabul in May killed at least 150 people and wounded hundreds. Photograph: Rahmat Gul/AP

 in Kabul-Monday 17 July 2017

The number of civilian deaths in the Afghan war has reached a record high, continuing an almost unbroken trend of nearly a decade of rising casualties.

The number of deaths of women and children grew especially fast, primarily due to the Taliban’s use of homemade bombs, which caused 40% of civilian casualties in the first six months of 2017, according to UN figures released on Monday.

Child casualties increased by 9% to 436, compared with the same period last year, and 1,141 children were wounded. Female deaths rose by 23%, with 174 women killed and 462 injured.

US and Afghan airstrikes also contributed to the surge in civilian victims, with a 43% increase in casualties from the air, the figures showed.

Tadamichi Yamamoto, the head of the UN’s Afghanistan mission, said: “The human cost of this ugly war in Afghanistan – loss of life, destruction and immense suffering – is far too high.

“The continued use of indiscriminate, disproportionate and illegal improvised explosive devices [IEDs] is particularly appalling and must immediately stop.”

The UN attributes about two-thirds of casualties to the Taliban and other anti-government groups such as Islamic State.

The worst attack of the war on civilians occurred in the Afghan capital, Kabul, on 31 May, when a truck bomb killed at least 150 people, amounting to nearly one-quarter of the 596 civilian deaths from IEDs in 2017.

In the countryside, bombs carpeting fields or left in abandoned houses have contributed to a steady, slow-grinding toll, with 1,483 civilians injured and many suffering amputations.

Kamel Danesh, 19, a student and avid cricketer, was helping a friend clear a house in Helmand a month ago when he stepped on a mine left by the Taliban.

“I didn’t hear the blast. I was just knocked over. My mouth filled with dust. I tried to stand up but couldn’t,” Danesh said. “I looked down and my leg was cut off at the bone. My hand was cut off.”

A rickshaw transported him from the suburbs of the provincial capital to Emergency, an Italian-run trauma centre, where medics saved his life.

“It was so painful. I prayed to God to take me,” Danesh said. The provincial cricket association named the Ramadan tournament after him, but he will never play again.

In June, the US conducted 389 aerial attacks in Afghanistan, putting this year on a par with 2013, when there were nearly 50,000 US soldiers in the country.

Of the 232 civilian casualties from 48 aerial operations, 114 were caused by Afghans and 85 by Americans. In one especially deadly operation, the US killed 26 civilians in airstrikes in Sangin district in Helmand.

With peace talks elusive, the war is expected to intensify and prolong the violence that has engulfed Afghanistan for four decades.
Danesh lost his leg to a conflict that began when he was two. As a child, his father and grandfather used to tell him war stories, but “now it is the young people who are sacrificing”, he said.

EXCLUSIVE: Lebanese army accused of torturing Syrian refugees

Shocking pictures show extent of injuries to four men who died in custody after being picked up in raids on camps near Arsal


Lizzie Porter's picture
Lizzie Porter-Monday 17 July 2017

BEIRUT - The Lebanese army has been accused of widespread torture of Syrian refugee prisoners, four of whom died in custody after they were picked up in mass raids at camps near Arsal on the Syria-Lebanon border.
The four men died after apparently spending several days in the custody of the Lebanese army after the raid, prompting the military to open an inquiry. However initial forensic reports, seen by Middle East Eye, said there was "no evidence of violence" against the prisoners and that the four men had died of natural causes.
But photographs also seen by Middle East Eye show huge gashes and bruising on the bodies of three of the four men, identified as Mustafa Abdel-Kareem Absi, Anas Hussein al-Hsaikeh, Khalid Hussein Moulays, and Othman Merhi Moulays.
The victims were left tied with plastic handcuffs for days on end, "to the point where it caused extreme physical damage - on both their hands and legs", said a legal source who had seen the bodies before their burial on 11 July.
An image obtained by Middle East Eye showing injuries to one of the dead men (MEE)
The source told MEE that deep wounds on the corpses were clear indicators of torture.
"There are also the wounds all over their bodies - on the shoulders, arms, knees - especially from the knees. People who were detained and released told me that they were tortured as well."
The source, who cannot be named for security reasons, questioned the army's official version of events, in which the deceased died of heart attacks and a stroke brought on by the weather.
"How can [the army's death report] repeatedly say that there was no violence at all? How can a doctor say that there is no source of violence at all?" the source said. "It was clear there were wounds on the head that led to bleeding."
Read more ►
A second source with extensive experience of examining images of torture victims said the pictures showed "enough evidence of clear signs of torture".
"This is beyond any doubt. There is clear sign of tension and trauma on the wrists, which could indicate that the victim has been hung by his wrists, by gravity," the source said.
"It cannot be signs of regular hand restrainers, the level of the trauma and pressure clearly indicates that the victims were hung by their hands."
"We can also see intense round traumas on the abdomen and lower back, which are not signs of falling. If somebody falls, the trauma is on the extremities, not on the central abdomen."
People close to the dead men also said they were confused about the army's version of events.
"There was no pre-existing health condition," a relative of one of the victims told MEE, who shared pictures of the burial.
"He was 100 percent healthy."
الجيش اللبناني يقتحم مخيمات للنازحين السوريين في بلدة عرسال ويعتقل العشرات منهم كما قام بتخريب المخيمات ومصادرة بعض أملاك اللاجئين.
When asked if they thought the deceased had been tortured, the relative said: "God knows best... but the pictures speak for themselves."
A medical source from a hospital in Arsal said one of the dead was also a medic, who did not live in the camp.
"He was an anesthesiologist," the source told MEE. "When the [army] statement said that he had pre-existing health conditions, we were shocked because that wasn't the case. He died healthy."
Lawyers representing the families of three of the men obtained permission for an independent assessment of the bodies. However, military intelligence intervened and confiscated the forensic samples before it could be carried out.
"We are not convinced that the initial report [from the army-appointed medic] is accurate," said Wissam Tarif, an advocacy director representing three of the families.
"There is no independent analysis yet - they put an obstacle in front of that.
Deep cuts to wrist of one of those who died in custody (MEE)
"We obtained an order from a judge in Zahle to obtain an independent forensic opinion, and the forensic samples were taken to Hotel Dieu [a hospital in Beirut] but the military intelligence intervened and took them and the organs [samples]".
Human rights observers are now sending images of the bodies abroad for independent examination, amid fears that the results of the army's own investigation will not be made public.
"We have sent photos of three of the bodies to a doctor with expertise in documenting torture for assessment, to see whether they show evidence of the cause of death," Human Rights Watch Lebanon researcher Bassam Khawaja told MEE.
"In Lebanon there is a history of the security services opening investigations but not publishing the findings, so the public and the families don't know the results", he continued.

Arsal raids

The four men were arrested after the army swept into two refugee camps at Arsal, al-Nur and al-Qariya, looking for what they said were "terrorists". They were met by a series of suicide attacks and one grenade attack, which injured several soldiers.
Read more ►
The army officially acknowledged that one Syrian died, a four-year-old child, in one of the suicide attacks, and four more subsequently in their custody.
However, sources in Arsal said at least seven others were killed, increasing the death toll to 12.
A medical source in Arsal said several bodies were received from both the Lebanese army and neighbouring hospitals in east Lebanon before and after the military operations. 
"Four days after the operation [on 4 July], we received four dead bodies from the Baalbek municipality," the source said.
"Three were buried immediately, and the other who was decapitated with his arms amputated was left for a week in case he was identified, but was buried a week later."
It was not until 11 July when they received the four bodies of the Syrians explicitly identified in the military statement.
While the army claimed that the Syrian child died due to the suicide attacks, other sources claim that she was crushed by an armored personnel carrier but the military prevented doctors from examining the body.
"We also received the body of a four-year-old, though we were not allowed to examine it," the source said.
"Most of the families at the encampments have said that the child was crushed, but of course I was not there to witness it."
Another body was allegedly taken the Rafik Hariri University Hospital in Beirut, before it was transferred to Arsal for burial, although it remained unclear why the corpse was separated.

A history of torture

The possibility of death under torture in Lebanese army custody comes against a background of previous accounts of abuse by security services.
Last December, Human Rights Watch published the harrowing account of a Syrian refugee who said he was beaten, verbally abused and had a rod pushed up his anus at Rehanieh military police prison on the suspicion of being gay.
HRW has thoroughly documented 10 cases in which civilians in Lebanese military detention said that they were tortured. This included during interrogations, when none of them had access to a lawyer or their families.
"The use of torture is taking place [in the Lebanese security system] we cannot deny that," George Ghali, programmes director of Lebanese human rights organisation Alef, told MEE.
"There hasn't been proper accountability for these cases which is creating a culture of impunity, tolerance and acceptance."
The UN Committee Against Torture has echoed similar concerns.  
The 30 June army raid near Arsal was the latest of dozens carried out on security grounds, in which more than 350 refugees have been arrested.
But human rights observers are concerned that security services fail to treat detainees with dignity during their operations.
The June 30 raid caused widespread anger and furthered accusations of ill-treatment of refugees by Lebanon's security forces, after images appeared of dozens of refugees lying face down on the ground, guarded by armed soldiers.
MEE also understands that some of the prisoners were not given reasons for their arrest.
"Putting their faces on the ground, lying on their stomachs - that is not going to provide more protection or security," said George Ghali.
"Our position is that the constant and systematic human rights violations that are occurring in this situation feed a hospitable environment for radicalisation."
Since the 30 June raid, media and human rights observers have been denied access to Arsal, which the Lebanese army consider a security zone.  
While some of those arrested have since been released, observers are concerned about the fate of the scores still believed to be in prison, who risk disappearing in Lebanon's opaque security apparatus.
"There are definitely people still detained," said Bassam Khawaja from HRW.
Although there was no evidence of people being forcibly returned to Syria, he said access by lawyers or family members to individuals detained by the Lebanese military is routinely "very hard".
On 10 July, the Lebanese prime minister, Saad Hariri, said the army's investigation into the deaths in custody would be completed in "two or three days".
But the results have yet to be revealed.
"The army is conducting a clear and transparent investigation into this issue and no one should doubt it because the army is keener on the security of the citizens and civilians than anyone else is," Hariri said.
"Also, questioning the investigation carried out by the Army Command is unacceptable."
A Lebanese army source told MEE that they did not have any more information than previously released comments. The military had described torture allegations as "baseless".

The army did not respond to questions from MEE to confirm the total death toll after the Arsal raid, say how many men were still in custody, or explain if there were plans to improve transparency.

Hong Kong: Can ‘one Country, two Systems’ continue?

Hong Kong’s contingent autonomy is inherently unstable because it rests on the mutual trust and restraint of both sides.

by Peter TY Cheung-Jul 17, 2017
( July 17, 2017, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka Guardian) When Hong Kong was reunited with the People’s Republic of China in 1997, no one could tell how the ‘one country, two systems’ (OCTS) framework would work. After two decades of experimentation, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region has largely maintained its separate and distinct legal, political and administrative systems, its market economy, its relatively free and pluralistic society and its status as a global financial centre — not to mention a way of life and culture very different from that of mainland China. But unexpected tensions now threaten to overturn this experiment.A pro-democracy protester holds a yellow umbrella, the symbol of the Occupy Central movement, as she watches fireworks explode over Victoria Harbour, as part of the celebration for the 20th anniversary of the city’s handover from British to Chinese rule, in Hong Kong, China 1 July 2017 (Photo: Reuters/Tyrone Siu).
The OCTS arrangement can be considered a unique form of contingent autonomy that depends upon the following conditions. First, given the huge asymmetry between the size and powers of the two parties, this arrangement rests on China’s self-imposed restraint. Second, to sustain the long-term stability of this arrangement, neither side should consistently harm the core interests of the other side. Third, even if one side may disrupt the equilibrium once in a while, they need to mend their fences before their relationship completely collapses. In other words, there should also be a modicum of trust between them. Last, the arrangement may be more stable if the smaller, weaker party still possesses resources to deter the more powerful party from imposing its priorities at will. Other factors such as the international community may also shape the development of this relationship.
Some of these conditions remain stable while others have changed. In Beijing’s eyes, the Occupy Movement that broke out in late 2014 in response to conservative political reforms approved by China’s legislature has severely challenged core interests such as sovereignty and national security. The rise of localists and pro-independence groups, though small in numbers, garnered around 400,000 votes in the 2016 Legislative Council election, putting Beijing on high alert. China has intervened more actively in Hong Kong’s governance since 2003, prompted immediately by the eruption of huge popular protests against the unpopular former chief executive Tung Chee-Hwa and national security legislation.
The ineffectiveness and unpopularity of the CY Leung administration prompted Beijing to intervene even further. To tackle recent political troubles, Beijing has begun to devise new control mechanisms, including interpreting the Basic Law in advance of local courts against opposition legislators who swore allegiance to ‘the Hong Kong nation’ during oath making. The criticism of the presence of foreign judges by Beijing’s advisors has inspired little confidence in the future of judicial independence and dampened the Hong Kong community’s confidence in OCTS.
In the near future, Beijing will be even more hands-on politically. Stability, not democracy, is paramount. Constitutional and legal levers utilised by Beijing will shape the general framework of Hong Kong’s government, legislature and judiciary, while administrative supervision and oversight of Hong Kong’s legislation will cover the specifics. Central directives issued to the Chief Executive are not known publicly. But with the formalisation and institutionalisation of all the possible central powers that could be derived from the Basic Law, the scene has already been set for central intervention in Hong Kong’s domestic governance once Beijing believes its core interests are being threatened.
Economically, Beijing is integrating Hong Kong closely with the mainland. The latest Greater Bay Area plans to link the Pearl River Delta, Hong Kong and Macao are being spearheaded by Beijing, not Hong Kong. Meanwhile, the strengthening of Hong Kong’s role as China’s renminbi offshore centre, along with the launch of the Shanghai–Hong Kong and Shenzhen–Hong Kong stock connects — not to mention the latest bond market connect — will not only enhance the city’s role as a global financial centre, but also fully entrench Hong Kong in the Chinese economic order. The completion of infrastructure, such as the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao bridge and the associated high-speed rail link, will expedite more cross-boundary flows.
Socially and culturally, Beijing seeks more discursive power and a higher degree of allegiance from the Hong Kong community. Promoting national education, Chinese culture and public acceptance of Beijing’s understanding of the Basic Law are priorities. The construction of the Palace Museum in the West Kowloon Cultural District, for example, ensures a dominant symbol of Chinese culture in a cosmopolitan area.
Newly appointed Chief Executive Carrie Lam has to address strong popular demands for housing, health care, retirement protection, civic engagement, democracy and reconciliation in a politically divided community. Simultaneously, she must cope with growing expectations from Beijing for legislation on national security, the promotion of national education and identity, and forceful action against political challenges to central authority.
Hong Kong’s contingent autonomy is inherently unstable because it rests on the mutual trust and restraint of both sides. Keeping a delicate equilibrium demands the highest degree of political wisdom, flexibility and patience from all parties. But to the extent that Hong Kong can sustain its competitiveness, political stability and distinctive institutions (especially the rule of law and freedoms) while capitalising on its international connections, there is no reason to believe that this historically unprecedented system will not work, albeit precariously. After all, since 1997 OCTS has defied the most pessimistic scenarios predicted two decades ago.
Peter TY Cheung is Associate Professor of Politics and Public Administration at the University of Hong Kong. He is a contributor to the East Asia Forum, where this piece first appeared.

Paul Krugman: Republicans Have Declared War on Truth Itself

Twenty-two million Americans stand to lose health insurance, and the GOP cries "fake news."

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By Ilana Novick / AlterNet-July 17, 2017,
Accusing the media of being "fake news" has worked so well for the Republicans, they've decided to give it a try against anyone who dares question their atrocious policies. The GOP's latest target is the Congressional Budget Office, simply because it has the gall to score the latest disaster of a Senate health care bill. 
Why, Paul Krugman asks in his Monday column, should we trust the prognosis of the CBO over the word of White House aides and congressional Republicans? For starters, there's the White House's record of "constant, blatant lying about health care that is, as far as I can tell, without precedent in modern history." 
Vice President Mike Pence tried to tell America that Ohio's Medicaid expansion led to a reduction in aid for the disabled, which Ohio's own state government had to announce was false. Similarly, Secretary of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said on Fox News that the Senate bill would cover more Americans than the current Affordable Care Act. This was a particularly cynical lie, considering that, "You can’t cut hundreds of billions from Medicaid and insurance subsidies and expect coverage to grow!" 
The CBO isn't the only nonpartisan organization to give a damning assessment of the GOP's Better Care Reconciliation Act. "In fact," Krugman writes, "just about every group with knowledge of the issue has reached similar conclusions. In a joint letter, the two major insurance industry trade groups blasted the Cruz provision as 'simply unworkable.' The American Academy of Actuaries says basically the same thing. AARP has condemned the bill, as has the American Medical Association."
The GOP has attempted to discredit the Congressional Budget Office because it overestimated the number of people who would use the Affordable Care Act's insurance exchanges, but that was only because fewer employers dropped their coverage. Plus, Krugman continues, "Overall gains in coverage have been reasonably well in line with what the CBO projected—especially in states that expanded Medicaid and did their best to make the law work." 
You don't have to be a Nobel Prize-winning economist to know that repealing Obamacare would be a disaster. Do we want to go back to pre-ACA Texas, where 26 percent of the non-elderly population was uninsured? Do we want a plague of junk insurance, with what Krugman describes as "deductibles so large or coverage limitations so extensive as to be effectively useless when needed?" Or a return to discrimination against Americans with pre-existing conditions? 
True, he admits, hardcore libertarians might be fine with that outcome, but that's not what the GOP is arguing. Instead, "at every stage of this political fight they have claimed to be doing exactly the opposite of what they’re actually doing: covering more people, making health care cheaper, protecting Americans with pre-existing conditions. We’re not talking about run-of-the-mill spin here; we’re talking about black is white, up is down, dishonesty so raw it’s practically surreal. This isn’t just an assault on health care, it’s an assault on truth itself." 
No one, not even Krugman, can predict whether this assault on truth will be successful, or whether the cries of "fake news" will be as effective against the CBO as they have been against the press. But the health insurance of tens of millions hangs in the balance.
Read the entire column