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

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Exclusive: North Korean leaders used Brazilian passports to apply for Western visas - sources

A scan obtained by Reuters shows an authentic Brazilian passport issued to North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un. Handout via REUTERS


A Brazilian source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the two passports in question were legitimate documents when sent out as blanks for consulates to issue.

Four other senior Western European security sources confirmed that the two Brazilian passports with photos of the Kims in the names of Josef Pwag and Ijong Tchoi were used to apply for visas in at least two Western countries.

It was unclear whether any visas were issued.

The passports may also have been used to travel to Brazil, Japan and Hong Kong, the security sources said.
Brazillian passport showing a picture of Kim Jong-il
A scan obtained by Reuters shows an authentic Brazilian passport issued to North Korea's late leader Kim Jong-il. Handout via REUTERS

Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun reported in 2011 that Jong Un visited Tokyo as a child using a Brazilian passport in 1991 - before the issue date on the two Brazilian passports.

‘JOSEF PWAG’

Both 10-year passports carry a stamp saying “Embassy of Brazil in Prague” with a Feb. 26, 1996, issue date. The security sources said facial recognition technology confirmed the photographs were those of Kim Jong Un and his father.

The passport with Jong Un’s photo was issued in the name of Josef Pwag with a date of birth of Feb. 1, 1983.

So little is known about Jong Un that even his birth date is disputed. He would have been 12 to 14 years old when the Brazilian passport was issued.

Jong Un is known to have been educated at an international school in Berne, Switzerland, where he pretended to be the son of an embassy chauffeur.

Jong Il’s passport was issued in the name Ijong Tchoi with a birth date of April 4, 1940. Jong Il died in 2011. His true birth date was in 1941.

Both passports list the holders’ birthplaces as Sao Paulo, Brazil.

The first security source declined to describe how the passport copies had been obtained, citing secrecy rules.

Reuters has only seen photocopies of the passports so was unable to discern if they had been tampered with.

Don’t use Huawei phones, say heads of FBI, CIA, and NSA

The US intelligence community is still worried about Chinese tech giants’ government ties




Huawei’s P10 smartphone.
 Photo by Sam Byford / The Verge


By 
No automatic alt text available.The heads of six major US intelligence agencies have warned that American citizens shouldn’t use products and services made by Chinese tech giants Huawei and ZTE. According to a report from CNBC, the intelligence chiefs made the recommendation during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Tuesday. The group included the heads of the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, and the director of national intelligence.
During his testimony, FBI Director Chris Wray said the government was “deeply concerned about the risks of allowing any company or entity that is beholden to foreign governments that don’t share our values to gain positions of power inside our telecommunications networks.” He added that this would provide “the capacity to maliciously modify or steal information. And it provides the capacity to conduct undetected espionage.”
These warnings are nothing new. The US intelligence community has long been wary of Huawei, which was founded by a former engineer in China’s People’s Liberation Army and has been described by US politicians as “effectively an arm of the Chinese government.” This caution led to a ban on Huawei bidding for US government contracts in 2014, and it’s now causing problems for the company’s push into consumer electronics.
Although Huawei started life as a telecoms firm, creating hardware for communications infrastructure, the company’s smartphones have proved incredibly successful in recent years. Last September, it even surpassed Apple as the world’s second biggest smartphone maker, behind Samsung.



But the company has never been able to make inroads in the lucrative American market, a failure which is in part due to hostility from the US government. Last month, Huawei planned to launch its new Mate 10 Pro flagship in the US through AT&T, but the carrier pulled out of the deal at the last minute, reportedly due to political pressure. The decision prompted Huawei’s CEO Richard Yu to go off-script during a speech at CES, describing the move as a “big loss” for the company, but a bigger loss for consumers.
Huawei is still trying to sell the Mate 10 Pro unlocked in the US, but this effort seems to have pushed the company to desperate measures — including getting users to write fake reviewsfor the handset.
US lawmakers are currently considering a bill that would ban government employees from using Huawei and ZTE phones altogether. During Tuesday’s hearing, Republican Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said: “The focus of my concern today is China, and specifically Chinese telecoms like Huawei and ZTE, that are widely understood to have extraordinary ties to the Chinese government.”
In response to these comments, a spokesperson for Huawei told CNBC: ”Huawei is aware of a range of U.S. government activities seemingly aimed at inhibiting Huawei’s business in the U.S. market. Huawei is trusted by governments and customers in 170 countries worldwide and poses no greater cybersecurity risk than any ICT vendor, sharing as we do common global supply chains and production capabilities.”
ZTE also issued a statement on the comments, saying: “As a publicly traded company, we are committed to adhering to all applicable laws and regulations of the United States, work with carriers to pass strict testing protocols, and adhere to the highest business standards. [...] ZTE takes cybersecurity and privacy seriously and remains a trusted partner to our US suppliers, US customers and the people who use our [...] products.”
Update February 15th: Updated to include comment from ZTE.

China’s Stability Myth Is Dead


Chinese President Xi Jinping during the unveiling of the Communist Party's new Politburo Standing Committee in Beijing, China, on Oct. 25, 2017. (Lintao Zhang/Getty Images) 

No automatic alt text available.
BY 
 | 
The announcement on Sunday that China would abolish the two-term limit for the presidency, effectively foreshadowing current leader Xi Jinping’s likely status as president for life, had been predicted ever since Xi failed to nominate a clear successor at last October’s Communist Party Congress. But it still came as a shock in a country where the collective leadership established under Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s was once considered inviolable. Xi, like every leader since Deng, combines a trinity of roles that embody the three pillars of power in China: party chairman, president, and head of the Central Military Commission. But like every leader since Deng, he was once expected to hand these over after his appointed decade, letting one generation of leadership pass smoothly on to the next.

It’s virtually impossible to gauge public opinion in China, especially as censorship has gripped ever tighter online. But among Chinese I know, including those used to defending China’s system, the move caused dismay and a fair amount of gallows humor involving references to “Emperor Pooh” and “West Korea.”

U.S. President Donald Trump’s electoral victory in 2016 similarly prompted rounds of reflection about and criticism of American democracy. But the Chinese case merits significantly more alarm. For all the erosion of norms under Trump, he seems unlikely, despite the fears of some, to fundamentally change the way the United States is governed. Xi, meanwhile, appears to have entirely transformed Chinese politics from collective autocracy to what’s looking increasingly like one-man rule. This switch should leave everyone very worried, both inside and outside China. A country that once seemed to be clumsily lurching toward new freedoms has regressed sharply into full-blown dictatorship — of a kind that’s likely to lead to dangerous and unfixable mistakes.

The Chinese Constitution itself is a largely meaningless document, promising as it does freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and personal privacy. Amendments are frequent, proposed by a committee of “experts” and rubber-stamped by the National People’s Congress, China’s annual — and equally meaningless — parliament. Brave efforts to give the constitution genuine significance were crushed, as with any other attempt to curtail party power, in the early years of Xi’s rule.
But the most recent change signals something far deeper than the party’s primacy over the law; it spotlights the essential instability of the entire political system

. For the last two decades, defenders of China have pointed to collective leadership and the smooth succession from one leader to another as signs that the country had solved the problem that bedeviled other autocracies such as the Soviet Union. The new leadership was established five years in advance of taking power, allowing strong continuity without the upsets of elections. The handover of power from Hu Jintao to Xi was considered a model of good rule, without the hangovers and struggles that continued for several years after Jiang Zemin reluctantly passed power to Hu in 2002.

Perhaps the system was always doomed, as soon as a cunning enough leader emerged — though Xi was not only skilled but lucky, utilizing the fall of his likely rival Bo Xilai to consolidate his own supremacy. There will be a certain grim amusement in watching intellectual apparatchiks scuttle to explain how their previous arguments in favor of collective rule have been superseded by the needs of the times and that strongman rule is now the only answer. As the New York Times’s Chris Buckley pointed out, Hu Angang, a regular and vocal apologist for the government, made collective rule the centerpiece of his book on the superiority of the Chinese political system — published in 2013, just after Xi’s initial ascension.

One of the surest signs of the change has been the intensity of propaganda in service of Xi in the last two years. This contrasts with the lackluster treatment of Hu, his predecessor, who was praised only pro forma. Xi’s virtues, meanwhile, are talked up in public at every chance, not just by state media but by businesses, local governments, and celebrities, all of whose continued prosperity depends on signaling their ability to follow the leader. Xi-ism is inescapable; in Tianjin this Lunar New Year, the traditional, sweetly cheesy floral zodiac display was replaced with praise for the Chinese leader.

Errors in depicting Xi, meanwhile, are harshly punished. Chinese media haven’t quite reached the level of Romanian media under Nicolae Ceausescu’s dictatorship, where newspapers employed people whose only job was to ensure that Ceausescu’s name was never misprinted — but editors in China now assiduously double-screen every reference to make sure that each title is correct and no character out of place for fear of heavy fines and internal punishments. A TV host harmlessly mispronouncing the “ping” of Jinping resulted in footage of the incident being purged from the Chinese internet.

The end of collective leadership at the top, meanwhile, has been mirrored by the destruction of channels of dissent and disagreement throughout the country. The most obvious form of this is the gigantic crackdown on media and the internet. Arguments that were permissible in 2009 became impossible to make in newspapers by 2014: that China could learn from other countries; that political reform was possible; that pluralism, civil society, and adherence to the law were good things.

Investigative journalism, once tentatively permitted as long as it confined itself to local corruption, was massively curtailed. The relatively freewheeling atmosphere of Weibo, a Chinese Twitter-alike, was destroyed. It was replaced with private WeChat groups, only to see a crackdown on those last fall, with the administrators of groups threatened with imprisonment for any “anti-party” speech. A mildly insulting reference to Xi in a group message won the sender two years in jail while the lawyer who defended him in court was struck off the rolls. Universities once saw some degree of open debate; today absolute ideological rigidity is demanded.

But the destruction of platforms for open discussion has been matched with an equal but much harder to discern crushing of channels for dissent inside the party and government. Even internal documents are prefaced with the singing of praises for Xi. The intensity of the political purges initiated by Xi under the guise of anti-corruption efforts has silenced officials, even behind the doors of their offices, for fear of giving ammunition to their rivals.

China’s official news agency, Xinhua, has always produced both open copy — for propaganda purposes — and internal reports distributed at different levels of the hierarchy. These were increasingly candid the more limited their intended readership. In the last few years, however, they’ve become far more cautious, self-censoring even for an internal audience, according to both provincial officials and Xinhua reporters. The Chinese equivalent of the U.S. State Department’s “dissent channel” in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, whereby even relatively low-ranking diplomats were able to send reports directly to the minister, was shuttered in 2013.

This bodes poorly for China’s decision-making both domestically and internationally
. The previous system was brutal, repressive, and corrupt — but it also saw reforms, both political and economic, that made lives better. Most critically, it avoided unforced errors. At home, there was no repeat of the sweeping ideological madness of Maoism; changes were introduced slowly and carefully, tested at the local and provincial levels before becoming national policy. Abroad, China has avoided the waste and blood of foreign wars ever since the disastrous and brief invasion of Vietnam in 1979, a record of peace that the United States and Russia can only dream of.

The public record of China’s internal decision-making in those decades is pitifully scanty. But collective rule, and the ability to debate within the party and to sometimes listen to outside voices, undoubtedly played a powerful role. With power now concentrated in a single man, and with nobody willing to challenge him, the likelihood of calamitous mistakes has soared. The first great disaster of the Xi era may have already begun; the carceral archipelago of Tibet and Xinjiang could easily metastasize into the rest of the country in ways that would, at best, hamstring economic growth and cripple intellectual development.

And the fear that has silenced so many voices in Chinese society will keep spreading. During Lunar New Year this month, traditional fireworks were banned from Beijing — even down to the firecrackers thrown joyfully by small children. By itself, that could be passed off as a legitimate health and safety measure. But such was the worry about public gatherings that there were not even any organized displays of fireworks. For the first time in decades, the sky over China’s capital as spring arrived was dead, black, and silent.

Population of Bangladesh, Rohingyas and China


No doubt, the economy of Bangladesh is booming, at the same time Bangladesh is a very small country. So, it is obvious reality that at a stage number of population will be overloaded for the country- if not be cautious immediately.

by Swadesh Roy- 

( February 27, 2018, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) Bangladesh and Myanmar are discussing bilaterally to solve the Rohingya problem. If anyone goes through the paper works of the series of the meeting of two countries, they will get one kind of progress for solving the issues. On the contrary, reality shows that the fate of the Rohingyas are gradually associating with Bangladesh.
Bangladesh is an over populated country; its present population is about one hundred seventy million. Within five years, the population of Bangladesh will be two hundred fifty million. Then at least one hundred million people of Bangladesh will be senior citizens. They will lose their hundred percent productivity. The government of Bangladesh has started many social security programs for the elderly generation in the meantime, though it is not sufficient. They have to provide more and the cost will be huge. Because within five years forty percent population of the country will go under government’s social security.
However, after five years when population will be two hundred fifty million, what scenario will come then is not clear yet. The present Finance Minister told me in an interview that Bangladesh will not face any problem at that time because the economy of Bangladesh will be bigger eventually. That economy can ensure more social securities for the senior citizens. The Finance Minister and the Prime Minister of Bangladesh are optimistic. Hence, both are relaxed about the population. She is so reluctant regarding the population that she in the meantime said about the Rohingya people, if she could run her country with one hundred seventy million people, she would be able to run the country to take extra one million Rohingyas but it was not possible for her to push them in front of death. Besides, she is preparing an island for the resident of the Rohingya people; the army personnel of Bangladesh have been already working on it.
No doubt, the economy of Bangladesh is booming, at the same time Bangladesh is a very small country. So, it is obvious reality that at a stage number of population will be over loaded for the country- if not be cautious immediately. In fact, the government of Bangladesh is not that much cautious about population control. Its population control department’s function is not up to the mark. Moreover, an alarming scenario is that the educated upper middle class is very much cautious about family planning. But the lower middle class and the poor class are not careful about this matter. On the other hand, a huge number of people believe that family planning does not go with their religion. So they never drive the life on family planning; at the same time a huge number of religious leaders always campaign against family planning from their religious point of view. That is why, due to frequent maintaining family planning or birth control middle class is becoming tiny minority in the society of Bangladesh which is alarming for the future. Because, middle class is the main strength of a society and a country and even its culture.
However, one million Rohingyas who are now in Bangladesh, they have come from very much backward situation. Last seventy years they did not get any modern facilities in Myanmar. They are the people who were totally out of the modern education. In Myanmar, their society was run by the religious leaders. On the other hand, in Bangladesh, in the name of the religion, many fundamentalist Islamic leaders are working in the Rohingya camp. Their faith is also against family planning. So, within five years one million Rohingya will turn into three or four millions. What situation will come then regarding Rohingya people in Bangladesh is not possible to predict earlier. It will be half of the population like the European countries such as Austria, Switzerland and others. Isn’t it possible to maintain that huge number of people as a camp people? On the other hand, why Bangladesh will give the entrance in the main stream in the country to the Rohingyas?
Bangladesh still is in the shuttle diplomacy to resolve the Rohingya problem. In spite of that, the scenario is clear to us, not the other world leaders, not the United Nation, only China can help Bangladesh to resolve the problem; at the same time the picture came in front of us, China does not want Rohingya in their original village and mainly at the Sittwe port city in Myanmar for China’s own business interest. So, Bangladesh, Myanmar and China have to sit together on this issue and find out a safe and rehabilitation for these Rohingya people. And it has to be ensure that Rohingyas will not be the camp people again in Myanmar, they will be the citizen of Myanmar and will get a modern life. In this twenty first century man cannot live as a camp people and cannot lead a life without education and proper work according to merit. We know at present many state chiefs in the world and many politicians are talking against diversity of the society- even in the most civilized and democratic Europe also. Truly, it does not go with human civilization. Diverse of any society and state is the beauty of a civilization. There is no scope to ignore that.
Swadesh Roy, Executive Editor. The Daily Janakantha, Dhaka, Bangladesh. He is a highest state award winning journalist and can be reached at swadeshroy@gmail.com

Brazil military's growing role in crime crackdown fuels fears among poor

 A suspect remains handcuffed after being arrested by Brazilian soldiers, during a joint operation at the Cidade de Deus (City of God) favela in Rio de Janeiro this month. Photograph: Mauro Pimentel/AFP/Getty Images

Dom Phillips in São Gonçalo @domphillips Tue 27 Feb 2018 08.01 GMT

Army admits special forces were on deadly favela raid as fears rise over Rio’s military takeover of security forces

Police with automatic rifles slung around their necks stood behind an armoured car near the entrance of the Salgueiro favela, a half-hour drive from Rio across the Guanabara Bay.

Nearby, Joelma Milanes, 38, cried as she recalled the night last November when she and her husband found her son Márcio Sabino, 21, lying dead with several others after a police and army operation.
The army told the Guardian its special forces battalion – Brazil’s equivalent of the US navy Seals – participated in the operation which left seven dead, but denied they fired the shots.

“The people who should be protecting us are killing us,” Milanes said. “They do what they want. There won’t be justice.”

Such concerns have intensified since 16 February, when President Michel Temer declared a “federal intervention” in Rio de Janeiro state, putting a general in charge of its police forces, prisons and security.

On Monday, Temer announced the creation of a new extraordinary ministry of public security and appointed another general, Joaquim Silva e Luna, as minister of defence.

Since Temer sanctioned a new law last October, investigations into civilian deaths during police actions by the armed forces have been handled by military courts and prosecutors. But Human Rights Watch says the army is stonewalling an investigation into the Salgueiro massacre, whose death toll rose to eight after a victim died in hospital.

And while the “federal intervention” has the support of Rio’s middle and upper classes – spooked by rising crime – poorer Brazilians like Milanes, who works in garbage recycling, are apprehensive.
“I think it will get worse,” she said. “It’s not a solution.”

Violent crime has risen in Rio as a mismanaged and deeply corrupt state government slumped into financial and administrative chaos. Rio’s former governor has been jailed for graft and the state is so broke it can’t even afford to maintain police cars, while armed drug gangs have extended their reach over towns like São Gonçalo.

Their dominance is evident in Salgueiro, where bare-chested gang members patrol the favela on motorbikes. The letters CV daubed in red on walls signal that the neighbourhood is controlled by the powerful Comando Vermelho (Red Command) gang, which monopolizes drug sales. After cargo heists, trucks are parked here and merchandise sold quickly and cheaply.

“Food and electrical goods go very quickly,” said one resident, who spoke anonymously for fear of reprisals.

The favela, which borders a forest and a swamp, is desperately poor. As in many such communities in Rio, the government’s presence is barely felt, and gangs and evangelical churches have filled the vacuum.

Pastor Pedro Oliveira, 39, who runs the Projeto Sara Me church, spends more time handing out food baskets and helping residents than he does preaching.

Márcio Sabino. Photograph: Family handout



Márcio Sabino.“We are a social support,” Pastor Oliveira said. “All the support you can imagine.”

Like many Rio favelas, Salgueiro hosts outdoor parties, called bailes, where music blasts until dawn. There was a baile on the night Márcio Sabino was killed, but his mother says he had just gone out to get something to eat.

According to reports by local media, El País and Human Rights Watch, the army and police had staged an operation in Salgueiro a few days earlier, dropping soldiers into the adjacent forest from helicopters. But the gang members they were pursuing were warned and fled unscathed.

A second operation took place in the early hours of 11 November. Callers to a phone line to denounce police abuses reported men rappelling from helicopters into the forest hours earlier, around 11 pm. Survivors told El País that shots came from the forest before men in black in helmets, with laser sights, emerged from the trees.

The army has said soldiers and police took part in a joint operation in armoured vehicles on 11 November. Initially it said they were fired on. It now says the soldiers heard intense gunfights and found the bodies on the road but were not involved in any confrontation.

Brazilian police are not equipped with sophisticated military equipment like ballistic helmets and laser sights, but the army’s special forces battalion has snipers, helicopter experts and night vision goggles, according to an article by Rio’s O Globo newspaper. The army denied to O Globo that special forces troops – nicknamed “ghosts” – had taken part in the operation.

But on Monday, an army spokesman told the Guardian that special forces battalion soldiers were in one of the armoured vehicles involved.

When Joelma Milanes and her husband, Claudio Lopes, 50, reached Salgueiro from their neighbourhood, they saw four bodies spread on the dark road.

She said that police stopped them approaching the body of her son, whom she said had never been involved in crime. “They put a gun in our faces,” said Lopes.

A photo later circulated on Facebook showed the victims’ bodies in a pile, “like they were garbage”, his mother said.

State prosecutors are conducting an investigation into police involvement but have been unable to interview the soldiers who took part, said Paulo Cunha, one of the prosecutors.


‘It is very difficult to separate the good people from the bandits,’ said a retired general. Photograph: Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images

In December, the military prosecutor running the army’s investigation interviewed soldiers involved in December in Goiânia, capital of Goiás state – where the special forces battalion is based. A spokesman said military prosecutors were still waiting for testimony from police officers and ballistics evidence.

Police are also investigating but did not respond to questions from the Guardian.

Neither they nor any of the civil or military prosecutors have interviewed Joelma Milanes.

There have been 29 military operations in Rio since 2001 but not one has produced lasting results, said Luiz Soares, a former national security secretary. He said militarized interventions ignored structural problems, such as the dominance of drug gangs in Brazil’s overcrowded prisons.

“These are reactive policies to put out fires. But they do not address the causes of the fire,” Soares said.

In a statement to the Guardian, the army highlighted “positive results” in previous operations, such as during the Olympics and World Cup, and suggested that if intervention was successful, it could even be used in other states.

Retired Gen Gilberto Pimentel, the president of Rio’s Military Club, which often acts as a voice for officers not permitted to give interviews, told the Guardian he was concerned there would be “collateral effects”.

“We are going to act in communities that are dominated by the bandits,” he said. “It is very difficult to separate the good people from the bandits.”

Millions of Chinese Kids Are Parenting Themselves

 

Feb 22, 2018 | 606 videos 

Video by Max Duncan
For generations, Wang Ying’s family farmed the misty mountains of Liangshan, one of China’s poorest regions. But now, the 14-year-old girl lives without her parents—she is the main caretaker of her two younger siblings. They are among an estimated 9 million “left-behind children” living alone or in the care of relatives in the Chinese countryside.

Max Duncan’s quietly poignant short documentary Down from the Mountains tells the story of a family torn apart by the forces of China’s rapid modernization. When not at school, Wang Ying cares for her siblings, tends to the farm and struggles to do her homework, while her parents live a thousand miles away, working 11-hour days at a headphone factory for around $15 USD per day. In the film, Wang Ying’s parents admit to feeling ashamed of their situation and are often worried about the safety and well-being of their children. But, as they explain, “we know the cost of being illiterate too well. So long as the children don’t give up, we must support them through school.”

“I understand,” Wang Ying says in the film. “They do this to make money so we can study.” But bearing the burden of responsibility has evidently taken a psychological toll on the young girl, who throughout the film longs for her parents and struggles with the pressure of childrearing. Her maternal grandmother, who lives a 40-minute walk away, sometimes helps with the farming, but she has small grandchildren to tend to and no space for three more. “I think a family being together is more important than anything,” Wang Ying continues. “But if I told them that, I don’t think they’d listen to me.”

In an article for ChinaFile, where Down for the Mountains was originally published, Duncan describes the “cruel irony” of Wang Ying’s family’s situation, writing that “experts increasingly feel that the absence of parents could harm a child’s economic potential even more than the deeper poverty they would endure on a lower family income.”

Duncan told The Atlantic that a major storytelling challenge presented itself in conveying the relationship between the family members. “When her mother returned, Wang Ying was clearly conflicted,” he said. “She was happy to see her, but clearly also resented her for having left her in charge. Culturally, these are not people who necessarily express their feelings to each other openly and verbally, and so it was a case of waiting patiently for the small signs that tell things unsaid.”

“In the end, it is not a film with high drama or a resolved ending,” Duncan continued. “But in that sense, it reflects the complexity of their lives going forward.”

This film originally appeared on ChinaFile, a project of the Asia Society Centre on U.S.-China Relations, and was produced in collaboration with the Pulitzer Centre on Crisis Reporting.

Author: Emily Buder

In wealthy Kuala Lumpur, the tragedy of child poverty in its public flats


MALAYSIA has many statistics to boast of.

GDP is now six times of what it was since its independence in 1957. The poverty rate is nearly zero – 50 years ago, nearly half of its households lived in poverty. Last year, Prime Minister Najib Razak said Malaysia is now an upper middle-income country, surpassing others in Asia and the world.

Yet, in Kuala Lumpur, said to be almost as wealthy as South Korea, close to all children living in its public flats live in poverty, a new Unicef report has found.

Official government figures measure poverty in terms of absolute poverty, ie. a fixed standard applied to all countries. In this sense, only seven percent of children living in its public flats are poor.

But when it comes to relative poverty, where one is measured against one’s own countryman, almost all children or 99.7 percent of them in its capital’s low-cost flats live in relative poverty.

“Whether we can pat ourselves on the back for doing well depends on this, it should be measured by how our most vulnerable perform, especially chidren” lead 
researcher Muhammed Abdul Khalid said at the report’s launch in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

“If our children are not doing well, we cannot say that our economy has progressed.”


Nearly one thousand heads of households and 2,142 children from 17 public housing flats in Kuala Lumpur took part in Unicef’s survey titled “Child Without: A study of urban child poverty and deprivation in low-cost flats in Kuala Lumpur”.

Firstly, and most importantly, what they found dispel the stereotype usually portrayed of the country’s poor.

They don’t have large families: Each family has, on average, two children, the same as the national average.

They’re not lazy: They work around 48 hours per week, one hour more than the national average. Ninety-percent work full time.

Despite this, they earn much less than the average worker. One in three does not have social safety nets.


For their children, this has devastating consequences – one in five are stunted, a rate higher than Ghana and on par with famine-ravaged countries such as Zimbabwe and Swaziland.

The number of underweight, stunted and wasting among children below five years old are also twice the KL average. Among older children, the situation is worse.

“Believe it or not, there is now only one kilogram of rice in my home,” a widow with three sons said in the report.

01-IKA
The first 1000 days of an infant’s life is the most crucial. Yet, in the public flats, nutrition and support are scarce for them. Source: Unicef/Ika

High food prices contribute to this. Nearly all (97 percent) said it was too expensive for them to prepare healthy meals for their children. One in two did not have enough money to buy food in recent months.

“This is a national crisis”, Muhammed said.

Malnutrition affects these children’s cognitive development, the effects of which are not reversible, he explained. In the long term, this presages medium and long-term implication on the future well-being and productivity of the economy.

The tragedy goes beyond poor nutrition. Bad hygiene, lack of safety and social ills make the low-cost flats a highly unsuitable place for children to grow up in.

And while education is often touted as a surefire way to escape poverty, it’s a close to impossible task for these children given their living quarters.

One in three households did not have books while eight in 10 have to study in the cramped living rooms, according to the report.


One upside unearthed by the survey is its teenagers perform just as well or even better than the national average in math and science.

“Imagine if they were not poor. They can fly,” Muhammed said.

Social protection floor

All these problems exist despite the country’s access to primary school education, nearly free healthcare, and government help for poor families and children.

14-ATIKAH
No toys, no books, no place to study. Source: Unicef/Nur Atikah Mohd Shaidi

The solutions, naturally, lie beyond what’s already available and what critics have long deemed as inadequate.

To assess the true scale of poverty, indicators should be switched to relative poverty measurement, adjusted by household size.

Unicef representative for Malaysia Marianne Clark-Hattingh said the study provided evidence to support more targeted policies and interventions, such as a “comprehensive social protection floor” to ensure “every child in Malaysia has an equal start in life”.

A RM200 (US$51.13) monthly aid, a “universal child care allowance”, to poor mothers with children aged below two could make a huge difference, according to Muhammed.

It’s something Malaysia needs to solve now, he said.

“Many of the things we need can wait. The child cannot … To him, we cannot answer ‘tomorrow'”.

Caring for those injured in rebel attacks in Damascus



-26 Feb 2018Presenter
I spent some of today at one of the finest government hospitals in Syria, the Al-Mouwasat University Hospital, seeing how they’re able to cope with injuries from rebel attacks. We’ve also once again been able to film Syrian forces attacking Eastern Ghouta from the Harasta suburb of Damascus. A warning: there are distressing images in my report.

Monday, February 26, 2018

HRC SL SENDS ITS OBSERVATIONS ON DISAPPEARANCES BILL & URGES PRESIDENT TO SET A GLOBAL EXAMPLE!

Image by by SP Pushpakanthan.

26/02/2018

His Excellency Maithripala Sirisena,

President of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka,
Sri Lanka Brief

Presidential Secretariat,

Colombo 1.

Your Excellency,

The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances Bill
The Human Rights Commission is writing to place before your Excellency its observations on the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearances Bill (hereinafter the Bill).

In memory of Rajani: the mother, the wife and the revolutionary Keeping memories alive

Dr. Rajani Rajasingham Thiranagama, a symbol of Tamil human rights activism was shot dead by the LTTE in 1989. At the time of her murder, Rajani was the head of the Department of Anatomy at the University of Jaffna. She was also one of the founding members of the Jaffna branch of University Teachers for Human Rights. Breaking ethnic and religious barriers Rajani married Dayapala Thiranagama a student leader from Kelaniya University who went onto become an academic in his own right.   

 The following article written by Dayapala Thiranagama first appeared in September 2009, to commemorate Rajini’s 20th death anniversary. It is reproduced to remember her 64th birth anniversary which fell on February 23, 2018.

Our ethnic differences would have appeared unbridgeable at the very beginning, as I was a product of the 1956 Sinhalese Buddhist social mobility that had been created by my parents’ generation of people who were part of the Panchamaha Balavegaya. (Sanga, weda, guru govi, and kamkaru) and in turn the 1956 and its perpetuation
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One night in 1983, soon after midnight Rajani woke me up and whispered to me that she had been asked to treat an injured boy from the Iyakkam (movement). For her, this was an act of compassion by a doctor towards her patient. For me it was a political act. I was frozen. I turned back and slept. I was caught up in the agony of belonging to the oppressor and the woman I dearly and unconditionally loved trying to ‘liberate’ her own community by undertaking her bit in the struggle. This whisper and the brief political argument that followed opened cracks in our relationship which grew wider and wider.  

Is the 2015 Geneva Resolution the ‘Framework’ For ‘Peacebuilding’?

UNHRC 37th Regular Session


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By SANJA DE SILVA JAYATILLEKA- 

The UNHRC’s High Level Segment is in session now, and is due to discuss Sri Lanka’s progress on the implementation of the Resolutions that this governmenteagerly co-sponsored in 2015 and 2017. Thereport of its progress is due to be presented later in the session, but one of the first reports to be presented at the Council is the Annual Report of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Annual Report of the High Commissioner for Human Rights

Sri Lanka does not feature heavily in it, this being a general report of activities of the Office of the High Commissioner (OHCHR) during the year. However there were 3 brief entries: that the OHCHR gave training on minority rights in Sri Lanka, another that ‘OHCHR advocated for legislative enactments and reforms necessary to ensure that States comply with international human rights standards in the administration of justice’ in Sri Lanka, and another entry under the heading "Early warning and protection of human rights in situations of conflict, violence and insecurity" which refers to a briefing the OHCHR gave to the UN Peacebuilding Commission, on "the situation in Burundi and Sri Lanka".

‘Situation’? Intrigued that there was a "situation" in Sri Lanka that warranted a briefing, I looked for the UN Peacebuilding Commission’s engagement with Sri Lanka when I came across a report of another briefing held 2 months ago,in November 2107. The report of that briefing says:

"On 20 November 2017, the Peacebuilding Commission (PBC) convened an Ambassadorial-level meeting to discuss the peacebuilding experiences of Sri Lanka, upon the request of the Sri Lankan Government. H.E. Mr. IndrajithCoomaraswamy, Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, H.E. Mr. Prasad Kariyawasam, Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Mano Tittawella, Secretary General of the Secretariat for Coordinating Reconciliation Mechanisms (SCRM) attended the meeting and explained to the Commission the peacebuilding priorities of the Government of Sri Lanka. Mr. JehanPerera of the Sri Lanka National Peace Council also delivered remarks."

The "Chairperson’s Summary of the Discussion" outlines some alarming conclusions:

"Mr. Prasad Kariyawasam, Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sri Lanka, explained that the engagement of the UN with Sri Lanka would be critical for securing sustainable peace and development in the country. After explaining the history of the conflict, he underscored that the elections in 2015 sent a strong message by the people of Sri Lanka against ethnic and religious divisions, extremism and impunity."

After this, there seems to be a consensus on the implementation of Resolution 30/1, which is unsurprising since this government co-sponsored it.

"Mr. Mano Tittawella, Secretary General of the Secretariat for Coordinating Reconciliation Mechanisms (SCRM), talked about the ambitious transitional justice and reconciliation agenda that Sri Lanka has embarked with UN support to operationalize its commitments to Human Rights Council (HRC) resolution 30/1…He stressed the importance of international support for the efforts to pursue transitional justice and reconciliation, and highlighted the PBF’s catalytic effect on the PPP that resulted in additional funding contributions from donors, such as the EU, UK, and Norway."

It gets even more interesting when UN official Andrew Gilmour has his say, because the summary of his contribution breaks new ground in "stealth diplomacy", or displays a lack of serious study on the matter of Sri Lanka’s war. Considering that Sri Lanka comprehensively won its war against a terrorist army, the UN’s list of appropriate action needs to be aligned to that reality. Instead he seems to be elevating the controversial Resolution 30/1 to the level of a national framework for post-war Sri Lanka "in the absence of a peace agreement"!

"Mr. Andrew Gilmour, Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, stressed that transitional justice is an essential element of the UN’s peacebuilding work in Sri Lanka, andin the absence of a peace agreement, HRC resolution 30/1 established the frameworkby which the government, victims and civil society can address the root causes of the past conflict."

"Peace agreements" are signed when two sides to an armed conflict are at an impasse. There are several features that are present in such a situation where the final solution is ‘negotiated’, which are not present when one side wins! Especially so, when one side is a terrorist army holding large numbers hostage!

"In the absence of" any evidence that anyone present there actually intervened to enlighten the UN representative, it appears that this government too imagines that Resolution 30/1 forms a framework for postwar peace-building in Sri Lanka.One fervently hopes that not all members of the Sri Lankan delegation agreed with this view.

At this meeting it seems to be the general consensus that Resolutions 30/1 is all Sri Lanka needs to have itself a bright future. Mr. Fernandez-Taranco, ASG for Peacebuilding Support, "highlighted Sri Lanka’s unique experiences on reconciliation, peacebuilding and economic development, and noted the centrality of implementing the HRC resolution 30/1 to its efforts to guarantee non-recurrence of past human rights violations and to put the country on the path to sustainable peace and development."

According to the Chairman’s summary some others insisted that Constitutional Reform should go hand in hand with Resolution 30/1!

"Human Rights Council resolution 30/1 had to be fully implemented with the support of Sri Lanka’s international partners. Moving forward on constitutional reforms would help guarantee the non-recurrence of violations and abuses…"

It is only right that a government that promised these things should try to implement them. That the government doesn't seem to have the support that it requires to run its regular affairs let alone implement controversial reforms and has gone into crisis mode following its dire performance the local government polls, surely comes as a relief to the large number of citizens who voted against them recently.

Human Rights Impact of Economic Reform Policies

There are also many other human rights issues that are useful and relevant to countries like Sri Lanka discussed at these UNHRC sessions, and new groundbreaking developments in setting human rights norms. Many of those initiatives of will prove to be valuable interventions that change the way States view their obligations to their citizens and to the rest of the world.

One of the welcome new initiatives of the UN Human Rights Council is the Special Procedure Mandate held by Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky, the "Independent Expert on the effects of foreign debt and other related international financial obligations of States on the full enjoyment of all human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights",who will present his report at the on-going session of the Council. His report is titled "Development of guiding principles for assessing the human rights impact of economic reform policies".

The attention of the international community on this aspect of Human Rights comes not a moment too soon for Sri Lankan citizens who are probably looking at a time of severe economic hardship as the government struggles to come out of the economic and financial quagmire it have got itself into. When the Governor of the Central Bank vehemently opposes a Bill to grant powers to the Prime Minister to take loans that will not come under its or anyone else’s scrutiny, and the Joint Opposition declaims it loudly while one of them hurriedly initiated court action to prevent it, the citizens are absolutely right to get nervous about the economic health of the nation and the perils that seem to await it. It is a relief that a UN body has actually decided to make governments accountable for the economic decisions they make that impact their populations adversely.

The new report’s first recommendation is: "Recognize that managing economic and fiscal affairs is a core government function, while underlining the obligations of States and international financial institutions to ensure that their economic reform policies and conditionalities on financial support respect human rights."

In a welcome development in recent sessions, the Special Procedures have included in their study the large international financial institutions such as the IMF and the World Bank at the request of the Council, and proposed guidelines not only for states but for these institutions as well. This report reiterates this: "While States have the primary responsibility to comply with international human rights treaties and standards, international financial institutions and other international organizations are also bound to respect human rights." In a previous report, Alfred Zayas, another Special Rapporteur said that some "believe that these institutions have a greater impact on the world order than the UN General Assembly and the ECOSOC combined". Since our government works closely with these institutions which have never been held accountable, it is useful that they have come under scrutiny of the Council as well, and reminded of their human rights obligations.

In what might be immediately relevant to Sri Lanka, the Bohoslavskyreport warns that "Fiscal consolidation measures are often accompanied by structural reforms, such as deregulation, labour market flexibilization, reduction in labour rights and various administrative and legal reforms. While these measures are ostensibly aimed at facilitating future economic growth, reducing unemployment and increasing tax revenues, they have often directly affected the enjoyment of human rights, including access to justice."

It warns States for red lines that should not be crossed: "States have the discretion to select and adopt policy measures according to their specific economic, social and political circumstances. Yet, this discretion is not without bounds; fiscal adjustment must be designed in line with specific substantive and procedural human rights obligations, which draw certain redlines that should not be crossed."

In a worrying reminder, the report outlines some of the fiscal consolidations measures that States usually adopt, without adequate thought to their human rights impact: "(a) public expenditure cuts affecting human rights-sensitive fields such as public health care, social security and education; (b) regressive tax changes; (c) wage bill cuts and caps and reduction of positions in the public sector; (d) pension reforms; (e) rationalization and further targeting of safety nets; (f) privatization of public utilities and service providers and introduction of user fees; and (g) reduction in food, energy and other subsidies affecting the prices of essential goods and services such as food, heating and housing."

It warns that ‘due diligence’ should be exercised before rushing into these reforms: "The onus is on governments to demonstrate that their proposed response measures will meet their human rights obligations. States, and if applicable, international financial institutions, must therefore exercise human rights due diligence before implementing far reaching economic reforms that have the potential to undermine the enjoyment of human rights."

Sri Lankans who are still unable to fully apprehend the enormity of the Bond-scam know that human rights ‘due diligence’ was the last thing on the minds of those in government responsible for the changes to the system that enabled that robbery. This new report should give them pause.