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

Friday, October 27, 2017

Ex-CM indicted for murder of TNA MP


Mahinda gave Pillayan a contract to kill Maithri!

By Chitra Weerarathne- 

The Attorney General yesterday told the Supreme Court that Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan alias Pillayan, the former Chief Minister of the Eastern Province, had been indicted in the High Court of Batticaloa, for the murder of Joseph Pararajasinghem, TNA member of Parliament for Batticaloa District. The murder was committed on or about Dec. 5, 2005. There are seven accused in the indictment. Pillayan is the seventh. The trial has been fixed for Nov. 6, 7 and 17.

Senior State Counsel Sudharshana de Silva appeared for the Attorney General.The aforesaid information was provided to the Supreme Court when the fundamental rights violation petition, filed by Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan alias Pillayan, was called before the Supreme Court yesterday.

Counsel Sanjeewa Jayawardena, PC., who appeared for Pillayan told the court that his client had been in remand custody for 746 days. The petitioner has complained of arbitrary treatment and illegal detention by the CID and the police.

The Supreme Court said the fundamental rights petition might be called again on March 20, 2018 after the High Court deals with the trial.

The bench comprised Justice Sisira De Abrew, Justice Priyantha Jayawardena and Justice Vijith K. Malalgoda.

FIVE STUDENTS INCLUDING 4 GIRLS WERE TORTURED BY A SCHOOL PRINCIPAL IN SRI LANKA.





AHRC Logo
Sri Lanka Brief

26/10/2017


(AHRC) Five senior students of the Deniyaya Central College in Matara District, were tortured by the Principal of the school in his office on 17 October 2017.

On 16 October, students started getting out of the school bus. At a stop near the school, one unknown student in the bus murmured the word ‘Pina’. Then several students turned their heads to search for the student who murmured the word. No one was able to identify the exact student. Finally, all the students returned to their classes and continued with their studies.

The next morning, on 17 October 2017, the Principal called four senior girls from year 11 and one boy from year 8 to the Principal’s office. When they arrived at his office, the Principal without any inquiries assaulted the five students.


The Principal hit the students on the head, neck, back and legs with his fists. He equally beat both girls and boys. Then he ordered the students to kneel down in the office. While they were kneeling many teachers and students passed through the office.

AND THE STUDENTS WERE HUMILIATED.

At no time did the Principal question the students about committing any crime or action against the code of discipline in the school. The students were in deep shock due to the fear of being beaten. The Principal asked the students if they knew his name. Then said they knew it. Later, the Principal ordered them to write a letter to him stating that they used the word ‘Pina’ to refer to him. All the victim students collectively told the Principal that they have never used that word. He did not accept their explanation. He accused them of using the word ‘Pina’ while on the school bus and that they intended that name for him, the Principal of their school.

One after the other, the students elaborated in detail what really happened on the school bus on the previous day. It was then that the Principal indicated that one teacher who was in the bus had made a complaint that a student had used that word in the bus.

Then the victims explained to the Principal that the identity of the responsible student had not been verified. Infuriated, he proceeded to assault those who were kneeling down. They began screaming. He dragged the girls by their hair and kicked them! Needless to say, the students suffered physical and mental trauma as a result of this ordeal as they were released.

According to the parents, after school was dismissed, all five of their children were admitted to the Deniyaya District Hospital for injuries suffered at the hands of the Principal after being beaten by him. Later, Doctors transferred the five students for further treatment to the Karapitiya Teaching Hospital. The Consultant, a medical practitioner, diagnosed that the victims were suffering from psychological trauma and the physical results of being beaten. He further confirmed the fact that the students are still in fear of returning to school. They are afraid that the Principal will beat them again. The students were continuously treated for 6 days between the two hospitals.

Later they were transferred to ‘Child and Adolescent Mental Development Centre’ at the Karapitiya Teaching Hospital for follow-up care and treatment.

The parents stated that they had lodged a complaint with the Deniyaya Police Station regarding the crime committed by the school’s Principal. They requested the Police to investigate and provide necessary protection for their children in the future. All the parents accused the Police of not investigating their complaint due to the powerful influence of the Principal. Their last resort is seeking justice through an independent investigation. They seek the safety and protection of their children. They fear there may be revenge-taking and repeated assaults by the influential Principal.

Parents called for Police and the National Child Protection Authority of Sri Lanka to take all possible legal measures to protect the rights of their victim children. These Institutions need to make sure of the well-being of the students and their education into the future.
(Excerpts from a AHRC release.)

Death threat to Anika : Job at stake for Kodagoda (ASG) who prostituted official position, and duped all – glaring evidence !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 26.Oct.2016, 11.30PM)  After Ms. Anika Wijesuriya the owner of ‘Monaach’ housing complex gave evidence against ex finance minister Ravi Karunanayake before the Presidential commission inquiring into treasury bond  scam , her brother Vijitha Wijesuriya allegedly received death threats via phone calls  from  Shanil Nethakumara supposed to be  a close relative of Ravi Karunanayake,  said additional Solicitor General  Yasantha Kodagoda P.C. before the Commission on the 17  th. He also went on to reveal  Anika fearing for her life fled the country .
However according to reports reaching Lanka e news supported with  cogent evidence , this revelation of Kodagoda is an absolute lie , meaning that  he has therefore committed perjury and  prostituted  his official position. 
By this mendacious utterances of Kodagoda he has made  it known to the whole world  , to what extent  the lawyers of the Attorney General ‘s department including Kodagoda are moving heaven and earth to convert the Presidential Commission into a Presidential Comic -mission with the sole and whole design to  sling  mud at and malign  the political opponents , instead of probing into  the true picture  regarding the treasury bond issue and the irregularities thereof , which in fact is their sacred duty. 

Perjury – No. 01

The learned PC Kodagoda must reveal ,  based on what valid grounds he said , there were death threats to Anika  if he is relying just  on a phone call received by Anika’s brother .If that ground is true , the repercussions Kodagoda has to face owing to his lies will  certainly affect his sister Geethani and brother Ajith because they are of the same blood . If the  threat affected both ,the consequence too must be similar.  But did that happen that way ? No.

Perjury  No. 02

This revelation  was proved untrue  when  Kodagoda told  the Commission ,  Anika fled the country ( ahead of the threat ) as if she came to know of it  ahead  through  light foretelling. This is because Kodagoda’s written notification  dated 17 th October  to the Comic- mission discloses the threat was made on 14 th October  to Vjitha Wijesuriya. However according to   palpable evidence in our custody ,  Anika has left the country on 6 th October( long before the alleged threat was made) .
Hence if Anika has told Kodagoda about the threat and left the country on the 6 th , she had fled before the threat was made on the 14  th . In other words she had  left the country  based on an imaginary threat  or on predictions of  a light foreteller , and not on a  real threat since the supposed phone call threat has been made 8 days after she left the country. 
Besides , no complaint had been made to the police here or in London where Anika is now, that there were  death threats to her before or since 17 th – the date of written notification about the death threat. 

Perjury No. 03 

The learned PC Kodagoda must reveal to the world the truth pertaining to the outrageous lie he uttered.   Anika during the whole of the first week of October was relaxing   at super luxury Surf Goddess Retreat Hotel , Bali Island  .  While she was there , a photo of hers when performing Yoga was sent to her Instergram account on 4 th October. At the same time  during a conversation with her friend Antonyanyan she had disclosed she will be travelling to London after her stay at  Bali (photograph is herein) .
Accordingly , en route to London , she had boarded the aircraft EK 349 belonging to Emirates airlines and arrived in Colombo on 5 th October at 1.55 a.m. After clearing her Immigration –Emigration entry rigmarole  she left the airport at 2.08 a.m.
Thereafter her father Nihil Wijesuriya , her brother Vijitha Wijesuriya and herself transacted a  large scale sale of  shares  belonging to Asia 2000 Investment Corporation Co. which is the main shareholder of East West Properties PLC Co. belonging to them .

In fact Anika disembarked in Colombo on her way to London to sign those papers . After completing that task as revealed to Antonianyan she left by airplane EK 655 belonging to Emirates Airlines the following day - 6 th at  10.10 p.m. Again on 9 th October she released  a photograph of London stating ‘ Loving London’ via Instergram  account (photo  herein).
From the foregoing revelations anybody can  gauge what amount of despicable lies Yasantha Kodagoda  PC , the additional solicitor general has uttered shamelessly . He is not only guilty of perjury but  also of prostitution of his lofty official position . 

Perjury No. 04

What is more wicked and outrageous   about the Kodagoda mendacity is his revelation that Shanil Nethikumar who supposedly gave the threatening call on the 14 th is a close relative of Ravi Karunanayake in order to decorate the lie, when  Shanil is not related to the latter at all , and  is only connected to the famous Salaka owners. 
In fact he is a relative of minister S.B. Dissanayake as   Shanil’s sister is married to S.B.’s son. It is said , Shanil is to tie the matrimonial knot with  minister Mahinda Samarasinghe’s daughter. At all events , it is rumored there exists a dispute over a woman between Shanil and Vijitha Wijesuriya to whom he is supposed to have given a threatening call.

Isn’t it therefore clear the hidden  aim of the AG’s department chiefs  to falsely allege Shanil is a relative of Ravi and implicate him in  the treasury bond inquiry and unconnected matters in order to sling mud at the political enemies ? This incident clearly bears out that these black coat comedians  have transformed the Bonds commission into Bonds Comic -mission solely and wholly for them to indulge in worst villainies and perfidies.

Death threat and fleeing from country –true picture 

The writer of this article himself had faced actual death threats via phone calls and otherwise , consequent upon which the writer  had to flee the country fearing for his life. That experience was real and therefore extremely  agonizing  as opposed to the falsehoods  concocted by Kodagoda . In any event that experience shall be recounted here even briefly to make one understand the truth vis a vis concocted falsehoods .
It was the day before the presidential elections 2010 , Prageeth Ekneliyagoda , a Lanka e news staffer  went missing. The day after presidential elections the writer along with his wife and children had to flee their home  following information received , to a safer place. About  30 mins. later  an unidentified armed group in black attire in a ‘Cab’ and motorcycles  arrived at the writer’s residence . The writer had fortunately by that time gone from there. That night about  40 threatening calls were received within 20 mins. The killers warned no matter where the writer , his wife and family are hiding , they cannot escape and they will somehow be murdered.

As the incoming threatening calls were unending , the phones were switched off. All the unfamiliar phone numbers were  written on  a paper and  a complaint was lodged with the police subsequently. As police complaints were unavailing , complaints were made along with the phone numbers through  which the threats were received to Ranil Wickremesinghe the opposition leader  at that time  and  Karu Jayasuriya ,as well as the SL representatives of  European Union, the foreign diplomatic missions  of Canada , America, Australia, International media Institutions , and several NGOs requesting them to probe into the threats and intimidation faced by the SL media personnel .
One foreign mission which investigated informed the phone numbers are not actual phone numbers, those are fake and  generated  by computers. Finally after being in  hiding at various places ,  fled the country on the advice proffered by  local and international organizations  when it came to a  point it was impossible to stay here.

Even after leaving the country the threats did not cease. During the period of the killer regime the two legged  ‘hunting dogs’ came in search of the writer on 6 occasions to the country where the writer was. These threats however have not ceased even today.  President’s  black coat hanger on  was also on the hunt searching for the address. 
Therefore , fleeing the motherland and moving into another country is not that simple or easy task as painted by Kodagoda if one is truly facing threats. It is not a pleasurable exit.   I don’t think   there is anyone in the country who is that crazy to flee the country simply because some stray individual gives a call to a brother of the one who is hunted  and threatens  ’I shall kill you.’  If there is such a fleeing crazy idiot that is only Anika of black coat  fibber Yasantha Kodagoda. 

Lies about phone call murder threats …

Regarding  Police offcers  and lawyers like Yasantha Karannagoda who drive  people into despair by falsely alleging there were death threats, the writer has personal experience . In order that the people shall know who lawyers like  Kodagoda of the AG’s department are , details of Kogagoda is being revealed herein. 
After the writer left the country the rulers at that time set fire to the Lanka e news portal . Their next move was to persecute the news editor Bennet Roopasinghe , a senior journalist .
A missed phone call was received by  Bennet . It is a practice when an editor gets a missed call , to respond by giving a call . Bennet therefore gave a call .Because he was busy and there was no answer he terminated the call in 20 seconds. What an officer like  Kodagoda did was   , lodged a complaint that he received a death threat call from Bennet’s phone. 
The individual who gave the missed call was their pawn. Bennet who was arrested on that complaint was remanded for two weeks on the false grounds that he  made death threats . Bennet who got disgusted  of the journalist profession thereby left Lanka e news  to join another media Institution. 
So that was an unforgettable  experience -  how people are put into trouble on frame ups after making false complaints against them that they made death threats . 

How did Late Nandadasa Kodagoda’s son turn into a profusely lying stooge ?

Yasantha Kodagoda is the son of late Dr. Nandadasa Kodagoda . Father was a calm and composed soft spoken individual . Hence, it is perplexing how did an  offspring of his become such an accomplished liar who resorts to subterfuges to serve the political agenda of villains ?  
The writer had the opportunity to discuss  with Yasantha  when the latter made an intriguing  statement . While betraying his lack of knowledge  about the independent commissions of the present government, he said ,  officers ( specially officers of AG’s department) of SL don’t adhere to  the practice of acting independently without   the  orders of the president or above.
 
 When the writer pointed out that situation should be changed , Kodagoda after discussing for a while said , even he is not in  the habit of acting without such orders . By this it can be understood why this black coat glib liar is stooping this low. 
At any rate in conclusion the following regretful comment must be made …
Poor Kodagoda who had even the prospects of becoming the AG , following this unfortunate incident of which he is the sole  architect , he is now facing the risk of losing his black coat and his job.  More than the writer , Yasantha Kodagoda being an additional Solicitor General  ought to know better the repercussions of his actions- what punishment  he will  have to face when  he commits perjury and prostitutes his official position .

By Special correspondent 



---------------------------
by     (2017-10-26 18:17:02)

Political pressure prompted untimely opening of Yala Block-I

Political pressure prompted untimely opening of Yala Block-I
Oct 26, 2017

Block-I of the Yala National Park was declared open nine days prior to the scheduled date on October 23 due to political pressure from a powerful minister, said Dr. Sumith Pilapitiya, former Director General, Wildlife Conservation Department (WLCD).Block-I of the Yala National Park was declared open nine days prior to the scheduled date on October 23 due to political pressure from a powerful minister, said Dr. Sumith Pilapitiya, former Director General, Wildlife Conservation Department (WLCD).

The decision to close the park on September1 was taken by the Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC) and on the advice of a special committee appointed by the Prime Minister’s Office.
“Although the national park was reopened last Monday, it was earlier decided to be reopened on October 31 after being closed for two months due to the prevalent drought condition and low rainfall,” Dr. Pilapitiya said.
On a different note, Dr. Pilapitiya said tourist arrivals had gradually increased over the years, and from 2008 to 2016, there had been a 1,000 per cent increase in tourist arrivals.
“As the former DG, I would say the DWC, during the past fifteen years or so, was politicised to a great extent. This decision was purely political and undermines the authority of DWC in administering one of its national parks, and brings the whole environmental and conservation policy of this country into disrepute. We strongly protest this politically-motivated decision. It is detrimental to the future authority of DWC, compromises its conservation function and is injurious to the well-being of this country and its people. This is not good governance,” he added.
(Chaturanga Pradeep)

Thursday, October 26, 2017

How Israel forces confessions from Jerusalem boys


Israeli forces arrest a Palestinian boy in East Jerusalem in May 2013.
 Oren ZivActiveStills
Maureen Clare Murphy- 26 October 2017
Israel subjects detained Palestinian children from Jerusalem to “extensive denial of their rights,” according to a new report.
The mistreatment of child detainees is part of a wider policy “aimed at encouraging Palestinian residents to leave the city,” the Israeli rights groups B’Tselem and HaMoked state.
These violations include physical abuse, sometimes amounting to torture, and other means of coercing children, usually suspected of throwing stones at occupation forces, to sign confessions which could lead to indictments.
More than 1,700 Palestinian boys aged 12 to 17 from occupied East Jerusalem were arrested from January 2014 through August 2016.
The groups collected testimonies from 60 boys aged 12 to 17 who were arrested and interrogated by Israeli forces in East Jerusalem between May 2015 and October 2016.

Arrested while in bed

More than half of the boys interviewed by B’Tselem and HaMoked were arrested at home between the hours of 11pm and 5:30am, while most were asleep in bed. Others were arrested on the street or were summoned to police stations for questioning.
Sixteen of the boys reported being physically abused while they were being transported to interrogation centers. Once at the interrogation centers, most were subjected to pain and discomfort while they waited.
“The boys were ordered to sit in painful positions (such as crouching) for lengthy periods of time,” the rights groups state. “In some cases, their hands were painfully bound, or they were ordered to face the wall and forbidden to turn their heads.”
Some of the children were denied food or water and access to a toilet, and others reported being physically abused by police while they were waiting.
Most children were not fully informed of their rights, as required by Israeli law.
“The right to remain silent was either glossed over or misrepresented,” the groups state. Half of the boys “were told by the interrogators that exercising the right would hurt them in court; that they would do better not to remain silent as this would prove their guilt.”
Most of the boys were allowed to speak with a lawyer before being interrogated, but were “only allowed a brief conversation of a few minutes.”
Eleven of the 42 boys who were allowed to talk to a lawyer before they were interrogated did so “in the presence of the interrogator, on the interrogator’s phone, in a phone call the interrogator dialed himself.”
Nearly all of the boys interviewed by B’Tselem and HaMoked said that it wasn’t until they were interrogated that they were told why they were arrested.
Only police or Israeli intelligence agents were present at the vast majority of the interrogations, even though Israeli law requires a parent to be present during questioning of a minor.
“However, once a minor has been placed under arrest,” according to the rights groups, the police have “discretion as to whether or not to allow this.”
The groups add police arrest children rather than summon them for questioning because it allows “the police to get around the requirement to have parents present at the interrogation.”

Interrogation and coerced confessions

The interrogation itself usually lasted a few hours; some of the boys were interrogated multiple times. Nine went through five or more interrogation sessions.
Boys were slapped and beaten during interrogation, or threatened, cursed and shouted at by interrogators. Extreme cold and sleep deprivation were also employed against the boys.
Some were told they would only be allowed to use a toilet or get food and water if they confessed to allegations against them.
Fifty of the boys signed confessions. “In 41 of these cases, the confession was written in Hebrew and the boys did not understand what they were signing,” the groups state.
Most of the boys were held at the notorious Russian Compound interrogation center in Jerusalem, where many were strip-searched and nearly all denied contact with their family.
One boy testified that he was held for two weeks in solitary confinement in a small cell with a bright light that remained on at all hours.
“It was easier to be tied up in interrogation than to stay in that cell, cold and alone,” the boy, who was 16 at the time of his arrest, stated.
“Being in solitary confinement was very hard. I signed a lot of confessions. They had me sign one after every interrogation session.”
The rights groups state that police officers, interrogators and prison guards enjoy total immunity as Palestinian child detainees’ rights are extensively violated.
Such conduct is nothing new. A report issued by B’Tselem in 1990 showed similar findings.
“The system strives to keep up the appearance of following legal provisions and regulations,” HaMoked and B’Tselem state, but such safeguards “are routinely rendered hollow and meaningless.”

EXCLUSIVE: Britain drops 3,400 bombs in Syria and Iraq - and says no civilians killed


MEE analysis reveals extent of RAF attacks on IS, while British government maintains there is 'no evidence' a single civilian has died

Iraqis flee a coalition air strike in Mosul in November 2016 (Reuters)

Jamie Merrill's picture
Jamie Merrill-Friday 27 October 2017


Royal Air Force drones and jets have dropped more than 3,400 bombs and missiles on Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria, an investigation by Middle East Eye has revealed, yet the British government maintains that there is "no evidence" they have killed a single civilian.
The vast quantities of ordnance dropped since the start of Operation Shader against IS in 2014 seriously undermines the claim by ministers that the RAF has not caused any civilian casualties in the three-year-long bombing campaign, and has prompted calls for an investigation.
The Ministry of Defence does not routinely release statistics on the numbers of weapons used over Iraq and Syria, but an MEE analysis has combined weekly updates of operations in the region and information collated by campaign group Drone Wars. 
It shows that up to the end of September UK forces have dropped at least 3,482 bombs and missiles in the battle against IS, including 2,089 Paveway IV bombs and 486 Brimstone missiles dropped by Typhoon and Tornado jets.
RAF Reaper drones have also fired 724 Hellfire missiles at IS targets.
The figures are conservative as MoD updates sometimes do not specify the number of bombs or missiles used in a strike, and last night MoD officials admitted that a further 86 bombs and missiles had been dropped in recent weeks.
The weapon of choice for RAF jets is the Paveway IV precision-guided bomb, but they have also fired large numbers of the more accurate Brimstone missile, which was originally designed as an anti-tank weapon but has been used extensively by the RAF to target IS snipers and vehicles.
The government describes the Brimstone as the most accurate weapon available that can be fired by aircraft, and they are conservatively estimated to cost £100,000 each; heavier Paveway IV bombs are estimated to cost £30,000 each, and Hellfire, fired by the Reaper drone fleet, cost £71,300 each.
Islamic State is in retreat in Iraq and Syria after a US-led bombing campaign which saw the RAF fly more than 8,000 sorties and killed more than 3,000 IS militants. A spike in weapons releases came earlier this summer, when RAF Typhoons and Tornadoes joined the coalition and Kurdish effort to liberate Mosul.
Islamic State regularly used "human shields" in built-up areas, but despite this and the scale of the ordnance dropped by the RAF, the MoD maintains it has "no evidence" that its strikes have caused any civilian casualties - a position now roundly rejected by defence analysts and opposition parties.
The MoD's claim is becoming increasingly absurd
- Samuel Oakford, Airwars analyst
"Our armed forces are among the best in the world, so they will be among the most discerning and accurate when it comes to targeting," Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable, told MEE.
"However, it is, at the very best, implausible that our heavy involvement could not have caused civilian deaths. We must not knock our armed services, but, equally, the government has to be honest in its assessment of damage caused in conflict."
The US Air Force, which leads the anti-Islamic State coalition, says it has caused 786 civilians deaths in the three-year-long air war, but despite saying the air war is the "most challenging fight in decades", the RAF has made so such assessment.
Earlier this month the minister of state for the British armed forces, Mark Lancaster, told parliament that the government "had been able to discount RAF involvement in any civilian casualties".
Iraqi forces drive through the rubble of west Mosul, which the RAF bombed in a campaign to defeat Islamic State (Reuters)
The RAF says it takes all steps to minimise civilian casualties, but it has conducted more than 1,600 strikes in Iraq and Syria - more than any other coalition country bar the US.
Reacting to the figures, military aviation experts and campaigners have said that it is no longer credible for the MoD to maintain that has not killed any civilians as part of the three-year-long operation to defeat Islamic State.
Samuel Oakford, a spokesperson for Airwars, a group which monitors civilian casualties from international air strikes in the region, told MEE: "The UK's claim that no British air strikes in Iraq or Syria have led to civilian deaths has always been difficult to believe.
"Based on the coalition's own civilian casualty reporting, it is extremely unlikely that a coalition member as active as the UK would have not had a hand in a single civilian death.
"As the campaign continues into its fourth year and more data about British involvement such as this is compiled, the MoD's claim is becoming increasingly absurd."
Over the course of the last 12 months the focus of the air battle against IS, which the MoD calls Daesh, has shifted from the Iraqi city of Mosul, which fell in July, to Raqqa in Syria.
But MEE analysis shows that the overwhelming majority of RAF weapons released took place against IS fighters in Iraq with 3,000 strikes, while a total of 482 bombs and missiles were dropped over Syria, prompting fears of blowback in the UK.
"Turning a blind eye to the consequences of air strikes and pretending they are somehow now 'risk free' is naive in the extreme," said Chris Cole, director of campaign Drone Wars UK.
"Unless we begin to understand and acknowledge the true cost of our ongoing wars in the Middle East, we are likely to pay a high price in the future."

Zero casualties

Airwars, which works with the RAF and US Air Force to report suspected civilian casualties, says that at least 5,600 civilians have been killed by coalition strikes.
In July there were reports that Iraqi soldiers used bulldozers to hide the bodies of hundreds of civilians killed in the final days of the battle for Mosul.
MEE's analysis shows that during the fight for the Iraqi city, RAF Typhoons and Tornadoes dropped dozens of Paveway IV bombs on IS fighters in the city.
However, the MoD does not have troops on the ground in the region carrying out battle damage assessment of sites struck by RAF munitions.
Instead it carries out the assessments from video evidence captured from the air, a technique that has been dismissed as ineffective by other coalition allies.
The RAF says it takes "all possible precautions to avoid civilian casualties", but Amnesty International has previously expressed serious concerns about the air war's toll on civilians. In a report earlier this year, it found the battle for West Mosul had caused a "civilian catastrophe".
Civilians were being ruthlessly exploited by IS, which had moved them into conflict zones, used them as human shields, and prevented escape. They were also being subjected to "relentless and unlawful attacks" by Iraqi forces and the US-led coalition.
A YPG fighter in the ruins of Raqqa (Reuters)
A source in the RAF told Middle East Eye: "Given the ruthless and inhuman behaviour of our adversary, including the deliberate use of human shields, we must accept that the risk of inadvertent civilian casualties is ever present, particularly in the complex and congested urban environment within which we operate." 
The source added that all missions were "meticulously planned" and there was no suggestion that UK forces have committed war crimes.
However, there are fears that by failing to fully address the issue of civilian casualties, the MoD is not presenting the full picture of Britain's campaign against Islamic State.
Iain Overton, the executive director of Action on Armed Violence, said: "If the RAF can claim zero civilian casualties, then the argument for more air strikes stands.
We have no evidence that RAF strikes have caused civilian casualties
- Ministry of Defence statement
"They can justify such by pointing at the issue of proportionality and IHL [international humanitarian law], they can claim that their kills are 'clean'. Perhaps they are, but they don't present the evidence to prove they are - not meaningfully." 
The MoD said in a statement on Wednesday: "Only by defeating Daesh for good will we reduce the threat to us here at home. British forces have crippled Daesh since 2014 and the RAF will continue to strike the terrorists hard where they plan their campaign of hate in both Syria and Iraq.
"We have no evidence that RAF strikes have caused civilian casualties.
"We recognise the challenge faced by coalition pilots in close urban fighting against a ruthless terrorist enemy that uses civilians as human shields, but are clear that to do nothing would leave cities in the hands of Daesh brutality.
"We do everything we can to minimise the risk through the rigorous targeting processes and the professionalism of our RAF crews."
This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.

The Poet Laureate of Hybrid War

The tragicomic absurdities of 21st century warfare are finally being transformed into literature.


No automatic alt text available.BY MARCI SHORE-OCTOBER 26, 2017

On Dec. 1, 2013, at least half a million people gathered on the Maidan, the large public square in the center of Kiev. They came to express their outrage at Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who the day before had sent Berkut, his riot police, to bludgeon the students protesting his sudden refusal to sign an association agreement with the European Union. For these young people, Yanukovych’s decision foreclosed the European future they had imagined for themselves. For the hundreds of thousands who joined them on the streets after they were beaten, Yanukovych’s violence against Ukrainian citizens broke an implicit social contract.

Among those who came to the Maidan that December day was 24-year-old Pawel Pieniazek, a journalist from neighboring Poland, who had studied Ukrainian at Warsaw University. The demonstrators were hurling bottles, flares, and cobblestones newly dug up from the pavement; the militia was using gas. Pieniazek bent down and tried to cover his face with a scarf. He saw people running, and he got up and turned around: On one side of him was a kiosk, on the other Berkut. He took out his press accreditation and shouted that he was a journalist.

“And who the fuck cares!” a Berkut officer shouted back.

Then a club came down on his skull. Pieniazek cringed, covered his head. Then came another club, and another one. He began to run, but running meant running the gauntlet. When Pieniazek finally got away, he looked for help, but all the ambulances were occupied by other wounded, bloodied people. He found a television station van, where a girl tried in an amateur way to bandage his head. Some 20 minutes later, a doctor who had finished taking care of other wounded protestors re-bandaged his head and warned Pieniazek that he needed to get to a hospital right away.

At the hospital, the young foreign journalist was received warmly. The doctor who X-rayed his head told him that they needed to go out on the streets and finally get rid of this government, because it was impossible to live like this.
Anti-government protesters walk amid debris and flames near the perimeter of Independence Square, known as Maidan, on Feb. 19, 2014 in Kiev, Ukraine. (Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images)

Today, nearly four years later, there is still a war going on in Ukraine, although on this side of the Atlantic it has been largely forgotten. Given the conflagration in the Middle East and the refugee crisis in Europe, U.S. President Donald Trump’s flirtation with a nuclear war against North Korea and other international catastrophes, it is perhaps not surprising that we have paid little attention to this “hybrid war” in Ukraine, where leading actors such as Russian President Vladimir Putin are only indirectly involved in the exchanges of fire. Yet a long tradition holds that a certain kind of war correspondent will feel a calling to capture moments of particular violence and preserve them as urgent, lasting literature of fact.

In December 2013, Pieniazek was just a bit younger than the American journalist John Reed was when he went to Petrograd in 1917, and about the same age as the British journalist Timothy Garton Ash was when he went to Gdansk in 1980. Reed witnessed the beginning of communism in power; Garton Ash witnessed the beginning of the end. What they share is having both fallen in love with revolutions not their own. Reed’s Ten Days That Shook the World and Garton Ash’s The Polish Revolution: Solidarity remain the classic accounts of these Eastern European revolutions bleeding into years of hot or cold war. Pieniazek’s new book, Wojna, ktora nas zmienila (That War that Changed Us), an account of a very different war in a very different era, has earned a place alongside those earlier works.

Reed and Garton Ash were both outsiders drawn inside. Reed finds himself in Petrograd in autumn, when it is damp and cold and the sun sets at three in the afternoon and does not reappear until ten the next morning. There are bread shortages and babies starving for lack of milk, and a city hungry for information, “[absorbing] reading matter like hot sand drinks water, insatiable.” Reed writes as if shouting breathlessly into a dictaphone in real time. There is not a moment to waste: An hour could plunge you a century ahead, into another epoch. He runs into a Bolshevik leader who tells him, “The game is on.” It is a Kierkegaardian moment of Either/Or, and Reed captures that dizzying thrill of the audacious decision.

Garton Ash’s voice is much more restrained. He describes hearing, upon arriving in Gdansk in August 1980, a word that sounded like yowta over and over again, and thinking it must mean something like “that’s life.” In fact, this was the Polish pronunciation of “Yalta,” the shorthand a reminder of the moment Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt agreed to a Soviet sphere of influence in Eastern Europe and Poland’s postwar fate was sealed. (In 1980, “Yalta” bore directly on the most urgent question of the moment: Would the Soviets intervene?) Garton Ash writes with British irony never entirely free of condescension: “Was it Balzac who said that a Pole cannot see an abyss without jumping into it?” And yet the reader senses it was precisely this contra spem spero that felt irresistible to the 25-year-old from London, who grasped that he had wandered upon special people at a special moment.

Like Reed and Garton Ash, Pieniazek writes books in the first person. He is disinclined, though, ever to put himself at the center of sympathies, or of events. Above all, his prose conveys a groundedness, a commitment to clarity amid reigning confusion. (Though he does not write in English, his writing translates well, because there is nothing ornamental in his sentences.) He does not feel himself to be a hero — nor does he see very much heroism among others. He feels empathy for his protagonists, but he does not idealize their willingness to risk their lives. Unlike the revolution that immediately preceded it, the war in eastern Ukraine is a tragicomedy.
A fighter from the Ukrainian volunteers Donbas battalion takes part in military drills not far southeastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol, on Apr. 1, 2015. (Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images)

After his head was battered by the riot police, Pieniazek could have gone home to Poland; instead, he stayed through the long revolutionary winter, through the February massacre on the Maidan, through Yanukovych’s flight across the border into Russia. When that spring Vladimir Putin annexed the Crimean peninsula and provoked a war in eastern Ukraine, Pieniazek headed east. He felt an obligation to see what was happening there, to complete the story he had been reporting in Kiev. At the time, in early spring 2014, he did not imagine he was heading to a war. He was expecting new instances, more brutal perhaps, of the pro-Yanukovych “anti-Maidan” gatherings that had taken place in Kiev.

Pieniazek describes arriving in the post-industrial mining region called the Donbas as entering a “special zone of lawlessness.” Neither in Ukraine in general nor in the Donbas in particular had the rule of law ever functioned very well — now this was true still more so. The gangster-president, himself from the Donbas, had fled; the state had all but disappeared. Everything was possible; everything (and nearly everyone), it seemed, had a price.

In the Donbas that spring and summer of 2014, self-declared “separatists,” claiming to be protecting Russian speakers from an American-sponsored fascist coup in Kiev, staged insurrections. Soon the “Donetsk People’s Republic” and the “Lugansk People’s Republic” were conjured into being, supported by Russian weapons, Russian volunteers, and Russian soldiers — which Putin suggested were figments of the Ukrainian imagination. In July, in a separatist-controlled part of the Donetsk Oblast, a Russian surface-to-air missile shot down — presumably due to some confusion on the part of the person shooting — Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. When Pieniazek arrived with the very first group of reporters, about 300 bodies were decomposing in the July heat.

What the local separatists themselves envisioned was varied: Some wanted a region cleansed of oligarchy, some independent city-states, some a mythical Novorossiya composed of parts of eastern and southern Ukraine, some unification with Russia. Yet it was only in the realm of the metaphysical that “Mother Russia” offered a home to the Russian-speaking residents of the Donbas. On the contrary: Putin found instability in Ukraine desirable.

On the other side, in Kiev, the government was unprepared to fight. As separatists stormed government buildings, the Ukrainian army was being crowd-funded on the internet. Volunteer battalions outside the control of the state military formed to fight the separatists. Self-organization, “the most impressive element of the revolution,” as Pieniazek describes, now sustained the fight to preserve Ukraine’s territorial integrity. It was volunteers who fed, clothed, and supplied Ukrainian soldiers. The volunteers were for the most part amateurs, offering what they had and what they knew. Some Crimean Tatars brought a slaughtered ram. Another volunteer brought an inflatable female doll — a request by some soldiers to substitute for the prostitute who had given them a venereal disease.
Ukrainian soldiers drive tanks along the road leading out of Debaltseve on Feb. 19, 2015 in Artemivsk, Ukraine. (Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images)

Pieniazek is soft-spoken, with a boyish smile, and very polite, but also quite tough in his modest way, and not easily shocked. He does not recoil from his motley protagonists. Among the separatists, some are locals, some Russian mercenaries, some Kremlin agents. On the Ukrainian side, too, Pieniazek tells stories of how the war and its volunteer battalions have provided a place for outcasts and losers, for lost souls unable to find a place for themselves. It was the criminals and hooligans, Pieniazek points out, who were best prepared for war.

He listens to conversations that go more or less like this:

“Who’s shooting?”

“How should I know?”

In this war, the longest and most gruesome battle has been the second battle for the Donetsk airport. Not long ago it was a shiny new airport, unveiled for Euro 2012. It was meant to open the Donbas to the world — instead it became an inferno. For combatants on both sides, entering the airport became a limit experience, a descent beyond human rationality. As one Ukrainian soldier tells Pieniazek, “For each of us it was like a duty: to undergo the airport.” The battle lasted from late September 2014 to late January 2015 — long past the moment when there was any airport left to defend. The Ukrainian fighters who continued to defend the remaining pieces of terminals came to be called “cyborgs” — the name suggesting the implausibility of their having survived in that airport for so long.

Villages surrounding the airport emptied. In October 2014, a local man named Artem shows Pieniazek around the village of Vesele. The very name — which means “cheerful” — now sounds sarcastic: The village is currently populated largely by homeless dogs whose owners have fled. As the two men walk amid the dogs, they hear whizzing sounds, an explosion, shells bursting. Artem does not even cringe; he is already used to the shelling. While they talk, a little girl a few hundred meters away is walking home. The shards hit her; she is killed there on the sidewalk; someone covers her body with a sheet. An old woman comes by, sees the body, and lifts up the sheet.
“Oh my God! Nastia!” she sobs.

The girl is — was — her granddaughter.

A few feet away from the girl’s body, Pieniazek sees broken eggs, blood stains, a flat cap, and a man in a blood-soaked shirt, still breathing.

Pieniazek spends a longer time in the Ukrainian-controlled village of Pisky, a mile or so from the airport. There “Kucha,” “Kent,” and other members of their volunteer battalion formed by the right-wing group Pravyi Sektor (“Right Sector”) moved into an empty apartment — empty because its owner, like most residents of Pisky, fled when the tanks and artillery arrived. In their way, the Pravyi Sektor fighters are very hospitable to Pieniazek, who has a talent for getting along with people. He also has a talent for remaining sober about who they are and what they are doing. In That War that Changed Us, Pieniazek describes the run-down post-Soviet apartment in Pisky: posters of naked women, sandbags covering the windows, and grenade launchers dangling from the wall together with a Ukrainian flag and a kitschy picture of a small dog. He notes that the building is more solid than it looks: It takes a lot of shelling. (In contrast, he observes, Pravyi Sektor’s ideological coherence is much less solid than it looks.)

Inside the apartment, Kucha and his comrades-in-arms spend their time listening to music and watching old Soviet films. Kucha’s favorite radio station is “Novorossiya Rocks,” whose jingle advertises the station as “cheering you on to victory.” Kucha seems unbothered by the fact that the radio station is cheering his enemies on to victory; the station plays the music he likes. His favorite song is the “Molodyе Vetra” by the group 7B. When it comes on, Kucha and Kent turn up the stereo as loud as it goes and sing along.

Before he joined the volunteer battalion to fight in the Donbas, Kucha was sitting in prison in southern Ukraine. Pieniazek senses that the Donbas is a comfortable place for Kucha, because he knows that here, no one will ask questions. Kucha did not get involved in the revolution on the Maidan; he was not especially interested. He is not especially interested in Ukrainian nationalism either. He was drawn to the Pravyi Sektor battalion, rather, out of a desire to go to battle like in Cossack tales of times past. “Had ‘Kucha’ and ‘Kent’ been born somewhere in Russia,” Pieniazek writes, “today they would no doubt be stationed a few kilometers away and supporting the ‘young republics’ — with dedication, but without ideological pretension.”

By the time he writes this, Pieniazek has spent enough time with both sides to know that everyone not only listens to the same Russian bands and watches the same old Soviet movies, but also uses the same old Soviet weapons from the 1970s. (“The quality of the weaponry,” he notes, “leaves much to be desired.”)

Pieniazek prefers not to talk to the combatants on one side about his contacts with the other. That said, he does not like to lie, and so if asked directly, he tells the truth. At one point, Kent asks him if he has spent time with the separatists near the airport as well.

When Pieniazek admits that yes, he has, Kent smiles and says, “You see, first we were shooting at you, and now they are.”

“He is sincerely amused,” Pieniazek writes, “there is not a trace of anger or suspicion in his words.”
Destroyed commercial airplanes sit scattered at the Donetsk airport on Feb. 26, 2015 in Donetsk, Ukraine. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

On Jan. 21, 2015, the airport falls to the separatists. Kent dies not long afterwards. Kucha is thrown out of his battalion for smoking marijuana. Pieniazek spends a lot of time with people like Kent and Kucha and Artem. He is a good listener. He listens to the gangsters; he listens to the sobbing grandmother. He has time. He is open to the unexpected. And he knows when to be agreeably silent. “I nod my head with understanding” is a minor refrain of his writing.

One Ukrainian soldier from a volunteer battalion shows Pieniazek a photograph on his phone: an enemy soldier against the background of a thicket, the portrait taken with the viewfinder of the weapon used to kill him moments later. The viewfinder’s characteristic cross is visible.
“It’s his last photograph — I took it just before I shot.”

The soldier grins. And Pieniazek understands that dabbling in photography this way is a source of entertainment in wartime. Pieniazek does not want to judge him: “After all, the point of being a soldier in a war is to kill the opponent.” And the long, empty hours of waiting to kill him are often the hardest to bear: the boredom, the pointlessness. Waiting is miserable — and there is a lot of it:
Fighting takes place only a few hours a day, generally beginning around 7 o’clock in the evening, after the international observers have returned to their hotels. The war becomes a routine. Everyone adjusts to its rhythm.

Pieniazek develops a sociologist’s understanding of the human need for routine. In the neighborhood of Zhovtneve, in the northern region of Donetsk, the shooting begins every afternoon at 4 o’clock. “This is Stunde Null,” he writes, “after which life recedes and everyone descends into the basements.” In the morning, the few remaining residents of Zhovtneve climb out of the cellars and begin to clean up in the courtyards. The women run around with buckets and brooms.

“Although there’s not especially much to do here, people are often rushing,” Pieniazek writes:

Three men are attaching a slab of fiberboard to cover a shattered window. One of them says: ‘I would be glad to talk, but we have to fix this quickly. The shooting is about to start.’ Every day they clean up and do repairs, despite the fact that the following day everything is going to be destroyed again. It’s Sisyphean labor, and they subject themselves to it with complete awareness. Why?

Although they are unable to articulate an answer, Pieniazek senses the reason: They want to carve out some small space for themselves where they have some tiny bit of control over reality, which has otherwise slipped from their hands.

It is this juxtaposition of brutality and normality, the extreme and the banal, that Pieniazek finds most disconcerting, and most poignant. The surreally short gaps of time or space — a kilometer, an hour — between eating salad in a cafe and the shards hitting the little girl on her way home. Pieniazek, too, gets used to the rules of the war and habituates himself to its rhythm. At night, regardless of where he is, he falls asleep as soon as he lies down. And so long as the explosions are not ear-piercing, he sleeps soundly through the night.
A pro-Russian separatist stands guard at a check point on the road heading to Mariupol on Mar. 4, 2015 in Novoazovsk, Ukraine. (Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

The Donbas, in Pieniazek’s portrait, dramatizes the extraordinary human capacity — evident today on both sides of the Atlantic — to normalize the abnormal. It also lays bare the physical consequences of a metaphysical leap into “post-truth.” There is no real reason for this war — the reasons that allegedly provoked it were dark fantasies: There was no CIA-sponsored fascist coup in Kiev. The Ukrainian Nazis coming to kill all the Russian-speakers in eastern Ukraine are imaginary.

In the town of Ilovaisk, Pieniazek speaks with a married couple in their fifties who tell him the story of how 50 local separatists with only rifles defeated 1,500 professional Ukrainian soldiers armed to the teeth.

“But how was that possible?”
“Because they were fighting for their land!”
“I nod my head with understanding, but really I understand nothing,” Pieniazek writes.

Even though in the course of this conflict I’ve been fed a similar line dozens of times, it always ends the same way: with my giving in. Because what should I continue to discuss with them? Make a drawing on a piece of paper to show that 50 people will not succeed in surrounding 1,500 regardless of how motivated they might be? There’s no point. In the Donbas, geography, measurements, all possible theories, and above all common sense have gone to the winds.

Pieniazek is not alone in being struck by the susceptibility of the Donbas’s population to Russian television. “Post-truth” — he writes — emerged precociously in the Donbas, thriving there long before Brexit and Donald Trump and the Oxford English Dictionary’s choice of “post-truth” as the 2016 Word of the Year. Not only soldiers and weapons, but also a very sophisticated level of fake news has come to the Donbas from the other side of the Russian border. Russia’s flood of fake news began during the Maidan, but reached another level during the war. One graphic fiction described the Ukrainian army crucifying a small boy in Sloviansk.

Pieniazek makes clear that in the absence of the Kremlin’s intervention and provocation, there would be no war. He also makes clear that the Ukrainian media is not innocent: While it has not flooded the Donbas with fake news, it has been selective in its coverage, reluctant to criticize Ukrainian soldiers and disinclined to admit that Ukrainian forces have also hit residential targets and killed civilians. In so doing, the Ukrainian media has played the game less well: It can not match the postmodern sophistication of the Russian media and at the same time has lost the trust of the population. It would have been far better, he believes, for the Ukrainian media to have insisted on the truth: that this is a war, not an “anti-terrorist operation”; that there is real support for the separatists in the Donbas; and that both sides, however unintentionally, have caused civilian casualties. This is the reality of war.
The jarring juxtaposition in the Donbas is not only between brutality and normality, but also between the postmodern and the premodern. Amid the post-truth machinations of Putin’s geopolitics, there remain small human cares, in their essence unchanged for centuries.
Amid the post-truth machinations of Putin’s geopolitics, there remain small human cares, in their essence unchanged for centuries.
 Long after most civilians have fled the town of Debaltseve, when there is no water, electricity, or gas, Pieniazek meets the 50-something-year-old Dmytro and his wife, whose basement has become their home. Artemivsk, the closest town under Ukrainian control, is only 40 kilometers (25 miles) away. But Dmytro does not want to leave his cat, and the evacuation buses do not allow pets. Moreover — Dmytro explains — he and his wife do not want to leave all of their things behind. It would not be possible to bring all of them: special things like photographs, diplomas, and notebooks with his own poems, but also ordinary things like pairs of scissors, sewing needles — little insignificant objects to which one becomes attached.
A Ukrainian fighter practices shooting during military drills not far southeastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol, on Apr. 1, 2015. (Photo credit should read ANATOLII STEPANOV/AFP/Getty Images)
Pieniazek never loses himself the way that Reed does, nor is his irony as biting as Garton Ash’s. He is both less romantic and less cynical than his predecessors; he is, rather, gentler and sadder. He immersed himself in a war he had never had any desire to experience. Unlike more than a few other young men, he had never been fascinated by tanks and guns and soldiers. Yet he got used to them and found his place in a war not his own.

Lev Tolstoy wrote that each unhappy family was unhappy in its own way. George Orwell followed with the remark that each revolution was a failure in its own way. Pieniazek’s work suggests that each war is a tragedy in its own way. In Ukraine, that way has to do with the effacing of the boundary between reality and television. Pieniazek describes what he saw himself and in so doing illuminates the reality of hybrid warfare: People are being killed in fact for reasons that are fiction. He understands that there is no escape from the senselessness of this war. Three years into it, he is resigned: There will be no happy ending.

“In these kinds of conflicts there are no winners,” he writes.

For a long time, Pieniazek hoped to be on the front on the day the war ended. Now he has given up hoping — that the end will come anytime soon, that he will have the patience to stay, that he can bear to tell the same hopeless stories over and over again. He imagines that when the war does come to an end some day, those on the side of the separatists who are ideologically committed will face reality:

“Instead of fulfilling the dream of an affluent life in an encore of the Soviet Union, they will have found themselves in a post-apocalyptic hole-in-the-ground with high unemployment and pathetic pensions, a place that is unrecognized by the world, that counts for nobody, and that is not needed by anyone for anything.”

Pawel Pieniazek is now reporting from Syria and Iraq.