Peace for the World

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

Sunday, October 29, 2017

FROM NANDIKADAL TO HANDI-KADAAL

HomeSunday, 29 October 2017


If there was one thing that characterized the 10-year rule of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, that would be the unprecedented level of violence unleashed upon the regime’s political opponents.
Infamous ‘white van abductions’ were prevalent in the capital city of Colombo, while strong critiques of the government often came under attacks from ‘death squads’ that operated with the blessings of the top echelons of the government.

The strength of a woman


By Gagani Weerakoon-2017-10-29

An activist loved and embraced by a majority internationally and often hated or misunderstood by many at home, Sunila Abeysekera remains a name synonymous with human rights and feminism in Sri Lanka even after four years of her departure from the physical world.

Feminism has come a long way since its decades old bra-burning-men bashing activism. Sunila along with her soul-mates in South Asia and around the world played an integral role in converting the movement into one that spreads love and speaks about friendship from its initial aggressive moves. This, in return opened up feminism for moderate men and resulted in having male colleagues who fight for women's fair share, especially in South Asian countries like Bangladesh and India.
Since feminism in Sri Lanka or South Asia cannot be spoken without speaking about Sunila, a group of feminists and human rights activists gathered recently at the office of the Women and Media Collective in Colombo – an organization founded by Sunila – to speak about her presence in their lives and how she became a pillar of strength in many successful movements across borders.

"We stand in the land of Lord Buddha today and we know, as was told by the Buddha, the only certain thing in life is death. We must remember the only way to escape death is being loved by people. There are so many who left us yet remain in our heart and mind. Sunila also left us in body but entered our hearts and that's where she lives," Kamla Bhasin, Indian gender activist and trainer on gender and patriarchy said.

Sunila's four-decade long activism began in the mid-1970s with her becoming part of Sri Lanka's first independent human rights organization – the Civil Rights Movement (CRM) – that was set up to protect the rights of young men and women who led the 1971 youth movement. Since then she was a key member of numerous civil society groups as a feminist leader, an advocate, a resource person and a trainer.

She was a founder of Sri Lanka's Pacific and Asia Women's Forum and also mobilized in support of the Mothers' Front to stand against State repression while helping to build Women for Peace to advocate for a political solution to the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka.

According to Kamla, Sunila played a critical role in shaping feminist thinking in South Asia while at the same time strengthening solidarity and mobilizing feminist activism in a wide range of struggles, be it garment workers,

under-priviledged or tea-estate workers in Sri Lanka or elsewhere.

Sunila took over the leadership in 1990 of INFORM Human Rights Documentation Centre, a leading institution committed to monitoring and documenting human rights violations perpetrated by both State and non-State entities, which she assisted in establishing in 1989. This probably was the beginning of her being hated or misunderstood locally and which eventually led her to station herself in Netherlands at the Institute for Social Studies as a recipient of a 'Scholars at Risk' award. This was also where she was diagnosed with late stage cancer.

Sunila became a global citizen by making friendships and building solidarities with feminists and human rights struggles across borders from Peru to Indonesia, from India to the USA, and from Mexico to Nairobi.

The solidarity was such that her fellow feminists Charlotte Bunch (USA), Roxanna Carrillo, Roshmi Goswami and Nighat Said Khan flew down to Sri Lanka to share their merry memories of Sunila.
In the Asia-Pacific region, she was closely associated with APWLD (Asia Pacific Forum on Women Law and Development), SANGAT (South Asian Network of Gender Activists and Trainers), Forum Asia (Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development) and served as Executive Director of International Women's Rights Action Watch Asia Pacific (IWRAW-AP) from 2008 to 2010.

They spoke about Sunila gaining international recognition while working with CWGL (Centre for Women's Global Leadership) in the global feminist campaign that led to the recognition that women's rights are human rights at the UN World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna in 1993, at other UN World Conferences in the 1990s and especially the Beijing World Conference on Women in 1995. She engaged in debates around the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court to ensure inclusion of gender perspectives and worked on implementation of the UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (on women's participation in peace negotiations and in post-conflict reconstruction). She was a member of the Global Civil Society Advisory Board to the UN Development Programme (UNDP), and of the Women, Peace and Security Expert Group convened by UN Women in South Asia.

Sunila's invaluable contributions as one of South Asia's pre-eminent human rights activists have been recognized internationally. In 1998, she received the UN Secretary General's Award for Human Rights from Kofi Annan. She was honoured by Human Rights Watch, with its Human Rights Defender Award in 2007. She was also nominated in 2005 as one of the One Thousand Women for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Roshmi who is originally from war-torn Assam recalled how Sunila played a major role in strategically preparing them to present their cases in international forums and how to tackle counter criticism without letting the real issues slip off their hands.

"She was actively engaged in getting Maoist women in Nepal to document violence and violations apart from helping us. I remember hesitating to go to an international forum and face it without having her by our side because she was the strategist amongst us. This was a time where there were no mobile phones or WhatsApp and other facilities where you could instantly seek advice. But she sat me down and briefed me on how to act if Situation A arose and how to tackle Situation B. She's so good at pumping confidence so much so that finally, I had the courage to criticize the UN for its hypocrisy while working in the organization. It gave me the courage to not think twice to step out and here I am today functioning as a donor to worthy causes," Roshmi added.

Nighat, a renowned Pakistani feminist who was familiar with Sri Lanka as a result of backing the JVP in the early 1970s had many anecdotes of Sunila as well as her daughter Subha to be shared.
"Among many memories, I have this particular one where Sunila, I and Kamla were in Bangalore in 1991. This was during the one month course on understanding gender and feminism which we all underwent earlier and Kamla came up with a proper one month course in 1986 and formed a South Asian Feminist mafia. Sunila was with her four-year-old daughter Subha and the little one was just roaming around while we spoke about concepts of gender, feminism and many others. So we spent days and hours in dismantling and rebuilding concepts and by the third week there was little lull until we heard a little voice screaming under the table; "Feminism, feminism, feminism...What is to be done!"

Ordered a report on allegations raised against the Diyawadana Nilame

Ordered a report on allegations raised against the Diyawadana Nilame

Oct 29, 2017

Diyawadana Nilane  Dela was accused of selling traditional temple Rajakariya lands of the Dalada Maligawa to two property developers contravening the Service Tenant Ordinance.

It was reported then that Nilanga Dela single-handedly decided on the lifetime value of Rajakariya for two lands and allowed property developers to sell the Rajakariya lands without any restrictions.
 
Polgodahena and Udagedarawatte are two Rajakariya lands that belong to Dalada Maligawa. Both these lands were blocked and sold without informing the buyers that they are Rajakariya lands nor were they given any Rajakariya deeds.
 
Diyawadana Nilame on Friday the newspaper was told that he was out of the country.  Minister of Buddha Sasana, Gamini Jayawickrama Perera, has ordered a report on allegations raised against the Diyawadana Nilame of the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy, Nilanga Dela Bandara.
 
The report was sought following allegations raised that Nilanga Dela Bandara had signed deeds to sell historic land in the Kandy area.
 
Commissioner General of Buddhist Affairs, Nimal Kotawala told that the Kandy Commission of Buddhist Affairs has been instructed to conduct inquiries into the allegations and submit a report tomorrow.
 
Kotawala said that the Minister wants to first verify the allegations before further action can be taken. 
 
AshWaru Colombo

S.B.’s speech exposes actual motive behind extension of period of Bond Commission alias “Comic-mission’’ !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 28.Oct.2017, 11.30PM) The Presidential Commission which was appointed ostensibly to inquire into  the irregularities and corruption if any ,when issuing treasury bonds is by now well and widely known as a degenerative Commission and a damp squib because it has deliberately deviated from its original objectives and transformed into a president’s  Comic –mission aiming only at maligning and mudslinging at UNP leaders . 
In any case ,  this Comic -mission was extended again on the orders of the president for a further 6 weeks. Incidentally  this was the second time its period was extended. 
Based on reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division , the sole and whole aim of this extension is to exploit this Comic- mission to mount scathing attacks on the UNP during the forthcoming local government elections.
The  dastardly and diabolic motives became very clear thus: Though the  Commission revealed  it required an extension to prepare its report following conclusion of evidence, but now   after the extension of the period by the president it is being  said , more witnesses have to be summoned and evidence must  be recorded.
This is obviously an absolute contradiction of the earlier announcement . In other words the actual motive of this extension is thereby betrayed - to perpetuate the mudslinging that is now being carried on  against the UNP even during the period of elections.

The whole spurious drama enacted through the Comic-mission deliberately aimed at humiliating and mudslinging at the UNP leaders with the support of  huge media publicity  came to light. That is  when the allegation that Anika had to flee the country in fear for her life because of  a supposed  threat made  by a relative of a minister , was proved as  baseless and  a calculated   concocted lie.
Lanka e news exposed this disgraceful and diabolic manipulation with cogent evidence recently. That is, it was proved without any trace of doubt  Anika left the country even before this so called  threat was made. Indeed two ministers are exerting undue pressures against  the CID ‘s investigations into this bogus threat . This was further confirmed indirectly when the police media spokesman on the 26 th revealed as usual there were no such pressures brought to bear on the CID by  the ministers . By these the true colors of president’s Bond Comic-mission has come  to the open.
Meanwhile the  TV  channel of Kili Maharaja ( an infamous despicable  stooge of the president) through the Sirasa channel known to the public as  ‘Sirisena’s clandestine  frequency’ is unrelentingly slinging mud at the UNP leaders . This villainous traitorous  channel is being used by the degenerative ‘Comic-mission’ to malign and insult the UNP leaders.
The ‘Sirasa’ which slung mud with the patronage of the president at the prime minister first , then went on to malign and insult Ravi Karunanayake and  Lakshman Kiriella ,has now begun attacking Akila Viraj Kariyawasam . Earlier on Mangala was castigated by it , but  now after Mangala Samaraweera , who is clever at ‘double games’ and double crossing became the minister of finance as well as  media , crept  into  the good books of Maharaja ,he is playing safe.
     
During a meeting held recently chaired by  the president with the participation of ‘SLFP Maithri’ group acolytes , S.B. Dissanayake has raised his opposition to the mudslinging targeting the UNP  , when the president has retorted ‘so, why are you  bothered?’ When S.B. had argued  , by vilifying  the UNP the entire government is being demeaned before the public , the  president had  revealed there is need for him to demean the UNP so that when he is quitting his seat , an SLFP government shall be formed.

From   the foregoing  it is abundantly clear , the actual motive of the president behind the extension of the period of the Bond Commission now degenerated into a ‘Comic-mission ‘ is to continue with the mudslinging against the UNP until the local body elections, and for no other reason. 
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by     (2017-10-28 21:18:32)

KILLING THE NEW CONSTITUTION AND THE TRAITORS IN SRI LANKA – SANJANA HATTOTUWA


Sri Lanka Brief29/10/2017

ON TYRANNY: TWENTY LESSONS FROM THE TWENTIETH CENTURY’ BY TIMOTHY SNYDER, THE LEVIN PROFESSOR OF HISTORY AT YALE UNIVERSITY, IS A TIMELY READ TO UNDERSTAND, IN PARTICULAR, THE RISE IN POPULARITY OF VIYATHMAGA AS A POLITICAL IDEA, INDEPENDENT OF HOWEVER WE APPRECIATE ITS CHIEF PROPONENT AND CUSTODIAN, GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA. A BRIEF BUT ENGAGING READ PUBLISHED EARLIER THIS YEAR, ‘ON TYRANNY’ HIGHLIGHTS MARKERS NOT JUST OF INDIVIDUALS WITH AUTHORITARIAN OR FASCIST TENDENCIES, BUT HOW THEY RISE TO POWER BASED ON THE INITIAL SILENCE, THEN TACIT APPROVAL, AND FINALLY, OUTRIGHT SUPPORT OF SOCIETY AND POLITY. THE BOOK PROVIDES A VITAL FRAME TO APPRECIATE A SPEECH BY MAJ. GEN. KAMAL GOONERATNE AT A VIYATHMAGAMEETING, WITH GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA PRESENT AND SEPARATELY, COMMENTS BY WIMAL WEERAWAMSA, ALSO MADE LAST WEEK.

Prof. Snyder’s words are anchored to the politics and individuals in the US, but they resonate far beyond, and arguably with even greater emphasis, for us here – who are no strangers to authoritarianism in the South, fascism in the North, the cult of the personality leading to the most heinous of violence, a war on terror leading to what Asanga Welikala called ‘the normalisation of the exception’ through draconian laws arbitrarily imposed, the suspension of rights, the evisceration of democratic institutions and the overall dismantling of democracy in the guise of patriotism, safety and economic development.

The book captures a disturbing case-study of what political theorist Hannah Arendt had earlier called ‘the banality of evil’. The example is around an experiment conducted in the 60s by Yale psychologist Stanley Milgram, who wanted to explore if there was in German society an authoritarian tendency that allowed the Nazis to do what they did, and how they did it. He failed to get permission in Germany for the experiment, and thus did it in Yale University itself. The experiment asked a group of students to give what they thought were electric shocks to individuals in an experiment about learning. There was in fact no electric shock. Prof. Milgram had asked the group who would act as respondents to pretend they got a shock. Despite visible trauma and pain, leading to in some cases, feigned death, the students asked to administer the electric shock continued to do so, just because Prof. Milgram had asked them to do so. The students were complete strangers to each other, and had no grievance against each other. No student, upon leaving the experiment, had asked what the condition of the respondent was. As Prof. Snyder notes, “Milgram grasped that people are remarkably receptive to new rules in a new setting. They are surprisingly willing to harm and kill others in the service of some new purpose if they are so instructed by a new authority. ‘I found so much obedience,’ Milgram remembered, ‘that I hardly saw the need for taking the experiment to Germany.’

One of the shortest chapters in the book also holds a key lesson for Sri Lanka, on usurping democratic institutions for authoritarian or fascist goals. As Prof. Snyder avers, ‘Sometimes institutions are deprived of vitality and function, turned into a simulacrum of what they once were, so that they gird the new order rather than resisting it. This is what the Nazis called Gleichschaltung.’
The final minutes of Maj. Gen. Kamal Gooneratne’s speech at Viyathmaganeeds to be appreciated in light of Migram’s experiment and Arendt’s observation. Maj. Gen. Gooneratne wants many things to happen to those who support a new constitution for Sri Lanka. He wants them dead, because he proposes they are in fact traitors. He normalises death to traitors as something natural, and inevitable. He wants a return to the height of the JVP’s violence in the late 80’s in order to create the context to deal with those who support a new constitution. His desire to punish traitors extends post-mortem. Mirroring the humiliation the JVP meted out to its political opponents even after being murdered, he wants those who were in favour of a new constitution to not even be given a proper burial. He doesn’t want Buddhist priests to bless them or to even visit their homes. All this is said in a matter of fact way, with Gotabaya Rajapaksa and many other luminaries present, front-row. To this day, Viyathmaga as a movement and idea associates itself completely with these sentiments.

Perhaps not to be outdone, MP Weerawamsa proposed that Parliament should be bombed if members do not object to the new constitution. It is a pincer movement. Maj. Gen. Kamal Gooneratne creates the conditions, supported by the regard, respect for and recognition of Gotabaya Rajapaksa amongst professionals in the country, a violent rebellion against political reform that the JO has no other means to defeat democratically. It is a careful construct of emotion and fear, a post-truth concoction intended to escalate calls for, and then justify, violence. Weerawamsa seeks to erode public trust and confidence in a democratic institution – Parliament – complementing Viyathmaga’s larger goal as setting itself up as, including primarily those in it, the selfless saviours of a country destroying itself over what by then will be projected as an entirely unnecessary, divisive construct – the new constitution.

Vigilance is called for, and vigour in a spectrum of responses that nips in the bud a political project that will, no matter how incredible it seems today, risk everything good and great about a democratic Sri Lanka. Online and over social media, Weerawamsa and Maj. Gen. Gooneratne were called many things. Whatever our responses are, name-calling and projecting them as fringe lunacy isn’t going to work. It will make them stronger. It will make Viyathmaga stronger. Everybody loves an underdog. We are right in being appalled but wrong in projecting our anger at a specific set of individuals and use against them, the same language and violence they seek to unleash on us. Lest we forget, when Maj. Gen. Gooneratne called for traitors to be killed, the audience present clapped loudly. When he called for the humiliation of those who were murdered, even after death, the audience clapped loudly.

 Weerawamsa says what he does, and will get away with it, because the language of inflicting violence against political rivals, and those who are different, in any way, is now mainstream. Even war, by those who lead it, is seen as a last resort, not a first response. In Sri Lanka, this is now inverted, and calls for the public to turn violent so frequent and banal, we gloss over it.

In Rwanda, just before the genocide, Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM) normalised violence against and the murder of friends, neighbours, partners, colleagues and random strangers. In the US today, the incumbent President’s words during his election campaign and after taking office have strengthened neo-Nazis, amongst others. What is said, is often the frame through which we see and engage with the world. If words by influential individuals and political movements incite hatred and violence, the invisible victim is a contest of ideas.

This ultimately isn’t about a new constitution, and whether one supports or opposes it. It is about the freedom to articulate an idea or thought that contests popular wisdom or the mainstream. It is about the ability to contest a construct by those in power, by those who aren’t from the same camp. It is about the kind of Sri Lanka we want. Viyathmaga’s political project is to weed out, violently, everything and everyone who it thinks is inconvenient. The end – a prosperous country albeit in fear and conformist – is a Faustian bargain Gotabaya and his ilk propose as desirable. He has many who support him. For them, by virtue of nothing other than seeking a new political order and its fullest expression through a new constitution, we are fit to be tortured and killed.

Let’s all reflect on that, and how this sentiment today will play out over 2018 and beyond.
-sanjanah.wordpress.com

Lanka’s Guy Fawkes drops parliamentary bombshell: Question is, is it high treason?

WIMAL WEERAWANSA BLOWS HIS TOP: Says Parliament must be bombed to kingdom come if it votes against his preferred wishes
The Sunday Times Sri LankaSunday, October 29, 2017

With the former President Rajapaksa on stage, Wimal spells out why the House must be air-bombed out of existence if new constitution is passed

Wimal Weerawansa stands today condemned by every syllable he uttered when, in the presence of the former President Rajapaksa no less on stage and brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa in the audience with a whole host of Buddhist monks in attendance, he devilishly declared that Parliament must be bombed from above and swiped out of existence if it dared to pass a new constitution as proposed by the present government.

Who is responsible for this SHAM?


Alleged Rs. 4 bil. financial fraud revealed in the dealings between Chinese Contractor and FormerIrrigation and Water Management Ministry Secretary regarding the Gin-Nilwala Diversion Project



  •  Friday, 20 October 2017 00:00

  • Astonishing revelations show how the former Secretary to the Ministry of Irrigation and Water Management, during the previous regime, had released a mobilization advance to the tune of Rs. 4012 million to  the Chinese Contractor of the Gin-Nilwala Diversion Project within 43  days. This secretary is now facing imminent arrest. 
    The Dailymirror investigations unearthed that these payments had been made sans proper approval.
     In such a backdrop, questions have been raised as to who has instructed the Ministry Secretary to release public funds to the project contractor, who was selected bypassing Government procurement regulations. 

    Elephant importation, land sale rackets!

    Elephant importation, land sale rackets!

    Oct 29, 2017

    An elephant was imported from Burma in 2007 for Dalada Maligawa by concealing its actual worth, and mentioning Rs. 261,592,500 as its price in the invoice (no. 97382) and taken the money out of the country, according to a Customs receipt. 

    This was stated by retired Supreme Court judge Nimal E. Dissanayake in a one-man committee investigation. The open market price of an elephant is between Rs. one million and Rs. 1.5 million only. The person at the Dalada Maligawa responsible has committed an offence punishable under the foreign exchange and customs regulations and the penal code, the committee notes.
     
    Its report handed over to president Maithripala Sirisena and dated 25.05.2016 recommends action against the persons responsible.
     
    Meanwhile, a nine-acre Dalada Maligawa owned land named Udawatte and Malnaidege Hena had been sold for Rs. 92,870,000 by two deeds, says a complaint lodged with the attorney general. According to the temporalities ordinance, the land can be sold, but the deeds should mention the land as being hereditary and that the buyers are subjected to serving the Dalada Maligawa. But, the Diyawadana Nilame has signed the deeds after concerning all those.
     
    Furthermore, only Rs. 730,000 had been credited to the Dalada Maligawa accounts. In report B 34983/2015 dated 29.05.2015, the AG has reported about this to the Kandy magistrate’s court.
     
    The CID is to investigate these frauds, says CID sources. 

    JFK Files Expose CIA Plot to Stage Miami Bombings and Blame Fidel Castro

    Former Cuban President Fidel Castro
    Published 27 October 2017
    The files were published as part of the nearly 3,000 documents collected by the U.S. National Archive.
    The CIA considered bombing Miami and other cities to create a terror threat while blaming the government of Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro, according to the recently-published "JFK files."
    The files were published as part of the nearly 3,000 documents collected by the U.S. National Archive on the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy and several other issues.
    The report said the Central Intelligence Agency, CIA, considered staging several terror events involving Cuban citizens to seek blame for Castro's government.
    “We could develop a Communist Cuban terror campaign in the Miami area, in other Florida cities and even in Washington," the files read. The plan also included a possible attack on migrants leaving Cuba to settle in the United States.
    "We could sink a boatload of Cubans enroute to Florida (real or simulated). We could foster attempts on lives of Cuban refugees in the United States even to the extent of wounding in instances to be widely publicized."
    The release of 2,891 previously classified files also shed a light on more aggressive tactics by the CIA, which included the placement of bombs and the creation of a terror environment.
    "Exploding a few plastic bombs in carefully chosen spots, the arrest of a Cuban agent and the release of prepared documents substantiating Cuban involvement also would be helpful in projecting the idea of an irresponsible government,” the files went on.
    The report also mentions how the CIA tried to assassinate Castro through bodysuits filled with deadly bacteria and explosive seashells planted underwater, taking advantage of the Cuban leader's taste for diving. 
    "It was known that Fidel Castro liked to skindive," the reports said. "The CIA plan was to dust the inside of the suit with a fungus producing madera foot, a disabling and chronic skin disease, and also contaminating the suit with tuberculosis bacilli in the breathing apparatus."
    Finally, the files revealed that after several allegations, investigations showed that the Cuban government wouldn't have been responsible for killing Kennedy "because such an act, if discovered, would have afforded the United States the excuse to destroy Cuba. The risk would not have been worth it.”

    FIFA gives green light to Israeli settlement clubs

    A Palestinian boy shows a red card to an Israeli occupation soldier during a protest against settlement clubs in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh in May 2015.Shadi HatemAPA images

    Maureen Clare Murphy -28 October 2017

    The world football governing body FIFA stated on Friday that it would not sanction or take other measures against clubs located in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

    “Today the FIFA Council shredded the organization’s statutes and declared itself a complicit organization that welcomes Israel’s illegal settlement clubs,” Stephanie Adam of the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel stated.

    “FIFA is intent on providing material support for Israel’s violations of international law amounting to war crimes against one of its own member associations,” Adam added, referring to the Palestinian Football Association.

    In its statement the FIFA Council did not address Israeli rights violations and instead referred to a “current situation … characterized by an exceptional complexity and sensitivity and by certain de facto circumstances that can neither be ignored nor changed unilaterally by nongovernmental organizations such as FIFA.”

    The organization added that the “final status of the West Bank territories is the concern of the competent international public law authorities” and that FIFA “must remain neutral with regard to political matters.”

    Settlements are war crimes

    In contrast to FIFA’s incoherent description of the situation, international law makes it quite clear that all Israeli settlements built in occupied territory are war crimes.

    FIFA’s own rules bar national associations from holding matches on the territory of another member without permission, as Israel does in the West Bank without Palestinian blessing.

    Human Rights Watch has warned that settlement football clubs contribute to human rights violations.
    “Settlements are built on land seized from Palestinians,” the group stated.

    “By allowing the [Israel Football Association] to hold matches inside settlements, FIFA is engaging in business activity that supports Israeli settlements,” Human Rights Watch added.

    Sarah Leah Whitson, executive director of the group’s Middle East division, stated on Friday: “With today’s decision, FIFA has continued to sponsor games in illegal Israeli settlements, in contempt of international law and contrary to its professed commitment to human rights.”

    Anti-Palestinian comments

    The FIFA Council position announced Friday was based on a long-awaited report concerning settlement clubs by an internal committee chaired by Tokyo Sexwale from South Africa.

    South Africa was expelled from FIFA when it was run by an apartheid government in the 1960s. The body has taken a more lenient approach to apartheid as practiced by Israel.

    Recent comments by Sexwale have caused uproar among supporters of Palestinian rights in South Africa, spurring demands for his resignation.

    Sexwale reportedly stated in a pre-recorded interview for a World Jewish Congress gala dinner in Cape Town that FIFA is “trying to use football to try and bring people together, so football is not used as a political football but as an instrument to unify people.”

    Concerning the two-year delay of his committee’s report, Sexwale said, “We have to give the process ample time for people to find each other – you’re dealing not with football, but with sensitivities.”

    The veteran anti-apartheid freedom fighter long imprisoned on Robben Island for his role in armed strugglemisconstrued Israel’s belligerent occupation of Palestinian land, now in its sixth decade, as religious strife between Muslims and Jews.

    He also stated that “It’s not acceptable that the Palestinian people should be digging tunnels to murder others but it’s also not acceptable that in retaliation there’s such a lot of collateral damage.”
    That claim echoes Israel’s propaganda that Palestinians have used tunnels to attack civilians, and that the massive violence perpetrated by Israel is merely a response to Palestinian actions.

    There is no record of tunnels being used to attack civilians, and an independent UN-commissioned inquiry into Israel’s 2014 assault on Gaza concluded that “the tunnels were only used to conduct attacks directed at IDF [Israeli army] positions … which are legitimate military targets.”

    Sexwale further whitewashed Israel’s routine, lethal violence against Palestinians, stating, “At the checkpoints, I see kids in uniforms of the Israeli Defence Forces who feel that they’re surrounded and indeed they’ve got a small state there. Sometimes it’s easy to make a mistake and to overreact.”
    Sexwale did not respond to a request for comment from The Electronic Intifada.

    Call for resignation

    Nearly 20 human rights, sport and Palestine solidarity groups in South Africa called for Sexwale’s resignation in recent days.

    “This decision comes after serious deliberation within the activist community and after several failed attempts to meet with Sexwale,” the groups stated.

    “For all the deceptive talk of keeping politics out of football, Sexwale and FIFA have done nothing but politicize something that could not be clearer,” Adam from the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel stated.

    Adam added that campaign groups will not drop the matter and will keep pressure on FIFA.

    Campaigners have long sought to bring attention to how Israel directly impacts Palestinian football by curtailing athletes’ freedom of movement, detaining and permanently injuring players and destroying their sport infrastructure.

    Thirty-two athletes including footballers were among the more than 2,250 Palestinians killed by Israel in Gaza during the summer 2014 offensive, according to the youth and sports ministry in the territory. An additional 27 athletes were seriously injured.

    More than 30 sports facilities were destroyed, at an estimated financial loss of $3 million, according to the ministry.

    100 years after Balfour: The reality which still shames Israel


    Two very different parts of Palestine highlight the injustice still inflicted on Arabs by Israel

    Peter Oborne's picture
    Peter Oborne-Sunday 29 October 2017

    OCCUPIED WEST BANK - Next week, exactly 100 years will have passed since British foreign secretary Arthur Balfour wrote his famous letter to Walter Rothschild, promising that Britain would help to create a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine.
    Current prime minister Theresa May says that the Balfour Declaration was “one of the most important letters in history”. It led within barely three decades to the creation of the state of Israel. No wonder then that Benjamin Netanyahu flies to London next week to celebrate its anniversary.
    It’s understandable Palestinian leaders weren’t invited. But they weren’t even consulted.
    This is wrong. The Balfour Declaration not only promised to deliver a homeland for the Jews. It also promised that “nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine”.
    Has this promise been kept?
    I flew to Israel and the West Bank to find out. The treatment of the Palestinians I witnessed is not just physically degrading for them. It is also morally degrading for the Israelis as well.

    Hebron: Closed city for Palestinians

    I drove to the West Bank city of Hebron, about an hour’s drive south of Jerusalem. When I typed “Hebron” into Waze (the local equivalent of Google Maps) a warning flashed up: “This destination is a high-risk area or is prohibited to Israelis by law.”
    October 2017: The upper road is for Israeli vehicles, the tunnel for Palestinians (MEE)
    Israeli settlers, however, occupy an area of houses above the ancient market, where they are guarded by the Israeli army.
    These soldiers - I’d guess at least one per settler - stand idly by as the settlers harass, persecute and assault the local population.
    Palestinians said that only that morning, a masked settler had attacked two children aged 10 and 11 in the streets. I was told the soldiers made no attempt to intervene.
    Such incidents, locals said, are common. In October 2015, student Dania Ersheid from Hebron was shot dead at a checkpoint. She was 17.
    March 2013: A Palestinian protester is arrested by Israeli soldiers during protests in Hebron against the closure of Shuhada Street, the one-time heart of the city (AFP)
    According to Breaking the Silence – an NGO which publishes testimonies of Israeli army veterans who have served in occupied Palestine – close personal ties between settlers and the military, combined with the fact that as Israeli citizens settlers are legally answerable not to the army but the police, means that soldiers often do nothing to protect Palestinians from settler violence.
    The Israeli army has created a ghost town in parts of Hebron’s Old City. In July, Unesco's heritage committee gave heritage status to these areas, much to the anger of Israel.
    The ancient markets are mainly closed because of “security reasons”. More than 1,000 houses have been shut up and more than 1,300 shops have been closed.
    I walked through this desolate area. Slogans such as “Hevron Yehudit” - “Hebron is Jewish” - have been scrawled on the walls. The Star of David was sprayed on the doors of many shops. The names of the streets have been changed from Palestinian to Hebrew.
    I reached the Ibrahimi Mosque, known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, where it is thought that Abraham, Isaac, Sarah, Jacob and Leah are buried.
    October 2017: An Israeli army checkpoint blocks off a street in Hebron (MEE)
    This is one of the most significant religious sites in the world. It marks what Jews, Muslims and Christians have in common. All of us (I am a Christian) worship the God of Abraham.
    If the magnificent teachings of these three great religions is to have any meaning, then all of us should come together at this site.
    But there was an invisible line in the street outside which Palestinians may not cross. A Palestinian woman ventured too far along the road. A soldier asked her: “Are you Muslim?” 

    Unequal in death as in life

    Inside, the site is divided, as so often is the case in Israel and occupied Palestine. One third is set aside for Muslims and two thirds are set aside for Jews.
    The partition was built after 1994, when an Israeli settler called Baruch Goldstein, who emigrated from the United States, entered with a machine gun and shot dead 29 Muslim worshippers in cold blood. More were killed outside the hospital by the Israeli army amid protests.
    Not far away is a little museum. I went in. It was empty and unattended. I called out.
    A lady came out of a back room and showed me around. The first room was dedicated to the ancient Jewish presence in Hebron. The second concentrated on the massacre of Jews by Arabs in 1929, part of wider tension over access to the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. It contained horrifying and vivid contemporary photographs and testimony of the atrocity, during which 69 Jews were killed.
    This museum helped me to understand the absolute moral and religious certainty felt by the settlers that Hebron belongs to them. For them it is Arabs, not Jews, who are the usurpers.
    As I left, I told my guide how moved I had been by the testimony of the 1929 atrocity. Then I asked her why her museum didn’t also mark the 1994 murder of Arabs by Goldstein.
    February 1994: The aftermath of the massacre at the Tomb of the Patriarchs (AFP)
    She replied that there was no comparison, because the murder of Jews in 1929 had been systematic, while, she said, Goldstein was a deranged individual acting on his own.
    Afterwards I drove up to the nearby settlement of Qiryat Arba, where Goldstein is buried. A guard nodded me through the entrance gate.
    Israeli authorities did destroy a shrine and prayer area that had been built after the Knesset passed a law prohibiting monuments to terrorists. The grave and plaque with the engraving, however, remained.
    I found the grave behind a row of shops in a public park. Part of the Hebrew inscription read: “To the holy Baruch Goldstein, who gave his life for the Jewish people, the Torah, and the nation of Israel.” Beside the grave, a glass container contained two candles and some spent matches. Mourners had also individually laid many small stones, part of the Jewish mourning tradition.
    I walked back to the shops and tried to talk to settlers. Most worked in the military or the police. They courteously refused to answer my questions.
    I found a woman who said she had known Goldstein. “He was my doctor,” she told me. “He was a wonderful man. He was an amazing person who took care of the Arabs and the Jews as well.”
    She said that she had come from the United States to Qiryat Arba as a child and that she was "against violence on both sides". As for Goldstein, she felt “there was something that pushed him over. There was a lot of violence on both sides at the time.”
    But the woman insisted that there was nothing “symbolic” about Goldstein’s grave in Qiryat Arba. He was buried in the settlement, she said, because he could not be buried in nearby Hebron.
    It needs little imagination to gauge how Israelis would react if a Palestinian who had shot dead 29 Jews in cold blood was given such a prominent resting place 
    It needs little imagination to gauge how Israelis would react if a Palestinian who had shot dead 29 Jews in cold blood was given such a prominent resting place in a West Bank town or village.
    Bear in mind many Palestinians killed in attacks on Israelis are buried in secret cemeteries with unnamed (but numbered) graves. This means that the families of the dead cannot visit their loved ones.
    Yet the religious terrorist and mass murderer Goldstein rests in peace in an honoured place in the Israeli settlement where he lived. This is but one example of the dual system in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
    Palestinians are subject to military law. Settlers are Israeli citizens, with all the protections of civil law.

    Schools, homes, hope crushed

    When I visited Israel 10 years ago with the lobby group Conservative Friends of Israel, my guides portrayed settlers as wild men and women who act independently of government in pursuit of a special religious vision.
    I have to admit that before last week’s trip, I had wholly failed to grasp the extent to which the settlers have become part of the basic apparatus of the Israeli state.
    There is colossal investment in infrastructure, roads, services and security for settlers. Meanwhile basic amenities and rudimentary security are denied to the Palestinians or  - as the Balfour Declaration defines them - “the existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine.”
    In the West Bank, these "non-Jewish communities” are vulnerable to arbitrary arrest and detention. Their houses get demolished without warning. They live Kafkaesque lives subject to the whim of inaccessible and largely hostile authorities, with none of the rights that come with citizenship.
    April 2016: A Bedouin man next to the rubble of his home, destroyed by Israeli army tractors in Khirbat Tana, near Bait Furik, West Bank (AFP)
    Checkpoints make even small journeys laborious, unpredictable and often impossible. Their life is dedicated to clinging on by their fingernails to their land while the settlers desperately try to prise it away.
    Let’s meet Abdul Rahim Bisharat, a Bedouin chief who lives in al-Hadidiya, an isolated hillside encampment above the Jordan Valley.
    Bisharat, 67, told me how the Israeli army had confiscated his livestock, shot his animals from jeeps and even helicopters, and repeatedly bulldozed his home.
    At one stage they attacked his tents 32 times in just 16 days, he said.
    As we spoke, Bisharat’s 10-year-old daughter Somood served us tea. Her name means “steadfastness” in Arab: she was born while Israeli bulldozers were demolishing the camp.
    Somood’s education is a problem. Bisharat told me how he had built a school, only for it to be destroyed by the Israeli army. He tried to build a kindergarten. That was also destroyed.
    In desperation the Bedouins decided to send their children to a school many kilometres away. This meant improving the track from the camp to the main road. But when they did this, the Israelis demolished their work.
    February 2016: Palestinian bedouin children attend class near the Jewish West Bank settlement of Maale Adumim, after the Israeli army dismantled classrooms and homes funded by the French government (AFP)
    The Israelis appear to be out to destroy the Bedouin way of life. That means driving them off their lands. It means the destruction of homes and livestock. It also means denying them access to water.
    Traditionally the Jordan River has been their main source of water, but the Bedouin are denied access because the river is a military zone.
    The Bedouin take water from streams. But the Israelis dig deep artesian wells to access the underground water supply, so the streams have mainly dried up. Now they have to buy water from the same Israelis who took it from them.
    The sheikh said that when the occupation of the West Bank started in 1967, his camp had included some 300 families amounting to 2,000 people. Now, just 16 families are left, scarcely amounting to 100 people. 
    “Some have sold their sheep and become workers in settlements,” he told me. “Others are unemployed. All the time we are chased and expelled from one area or another.”

    How UK government still echoes Balfour

    The Israelis want to relocate the Bedouin to what are are frequently called townships and end their ancient nomadic way of life.
    There is a deep paradox lurking here. The Israelis impose their own arbitrary system of law on the West Bank. Yet the Israeli occupation is itself illegal under international law.
    Theresa May’s exclusion of Palestinians from her celebration reflects the exclusion of Palestinians from the Balfour Declaration 100 years ago
    Yes, the Jews have the national homeland promised by the British a century ago. I wholeheartedly concur with a common British view that no other people have suffered as much as the Jews at the hands of persecutors throughout their extraordinary history.
    That is why I have always supported the existence of an Israeli state.
    But May’s exclusion of Palestinians from her celebration next week reflects with uncanny accuracy the exclusion of Palestinians from the Balfour Declaration 100 years ago.
    The British treated the Palestinians as non-people then, and still treat them as non-people today. I believe this scornful neglect may be even more damaging for Israelis than it is of the Palestinians themselves because it is such a betrayal of the idealistic and humane vision that brought Israel into being.
    Peter Oborne won best commentary/blogging in 2017 and was named freelancer of the year in 2016 at the Online Media Awards for articles he wrote for Middle East Eye. He also was British Press Awards Columnist of the Year 2013. He resigned as chief political columnist of the Daily Telegraph in 2015. His books include The Triumph of the Political Class, The Rise of Political Lying, and  Why the West is Wrong about Nuclear Iran.
    The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
    Photo: Abdul Rahim Bisharat, a Bedouin chief who lives in al-Hadidiya, an encampment above the Jordan Valley (MEE), is interviewed by Peter Oborne