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

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Bosnia Is Teetering on the Precipice of a Political Crisis

Should the United States be trying to stop it?


A demonstrator waves a Bosnian flag as police stand guard while protesters gather in front of a local government building in the northern Bosnian town of Tuzla in February 2014. (Elvis Barukcic BARUKCIC/AFP/Getty Images) 
No automatic alt text available.
BY -
MARCH 21, 2018, 8:00 AM

More than two decades after Bosnia and Herzegovina gained its independence following the bloody dissolution of Yugoslavia, the government there is facing yet another looming political crisis, and the West appears to be doing little to stop it.

At issue is an electoral law impasse that’s a symptom of a weak constitution that was never meant to govern a country for a significant period of time, with political power brokers who have no incentive to resolve the crisis and four foreign countries clamoring for influence.

In 1995, the Dayton Accords put a stop to the three-and-a-half-year war in the Balkans, and Bosnia still uses Annex 4 of the accords as its constitution.

Under that constitution, all places at all levels of government are allocated by affiliation to one of three groups: Croat, Bosniak, or Serb. The country, since the end of the war in Bosnia, has been divided into two federal entities. One is the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, populated primarily by Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats. The other is Republika Srpska, whose president is currently Bosnian Serb Milorad Dodik, a onetime Western darling now flirting with secession.

Political crises aren’t new in the Balkans, but a new version of an old crisis is now crystallizing. In 2016, with some Croats advocating for a third, Croat-dominated entity to accompany Republika Srpska and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bozo Ljubic, a Croat politician, brought forward a complaint.

Previously, the House of Peoples was made up of delegates reflecting the proportion of the main ethnic groups living in different cantons, with at least one delegate from each ethnic group. Ljubic complained that this violated Dayton because appointing Croats from majority Bosniak cantons distorted Croats’ rights to legitimate representation.

In December 2016, the Constitutional Court agreed with him, annulling several parts of its election law and called for a new one.

Passing a new law in time for general elections — for the tripartite presidency and the House of Representatives — isn’t that easy. Some Bosnian Croats and Croatians in Croatia want the law amended so that Bosniaks cannot elect Croat representatives. Numerically dominant Bosniaks, they argue, should not be allowed to elect their own and Croats’ member of the tripartite presidency.

“We are facing this year new elections that are in danger of not being implemented as this electoral law — there’s no deal between the three parties to change this electoral law,” warns Zeljana Zovko, who was a foreign affairs advisor for the chairman of the Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina and is now a member of the European Parliament from Croatia.

Others say, however, that such language is a political power grab by some Bosnian Croats — specifically, the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnian Croats’ largest political party, better known as the HDZ.

The proposed electoral law is “almost exclusively the product of HDZ talking points,” argues Jasmin Mujanovic, a political scientist and author of Hunger and Fury: The Crisis of Democracy in the Balkans.

“It has very little to do with ethnicity or nationalism,” he says. “It’s the continuous attempt of the HDZ to carve out a de facto one-party state in the regions where it’s done very well electorally.”
Mujanovic adds that HDZ-supported electoral law would immediately be struck down by the European Court of Human Rights.

Florian Bieber, a professor of Southeast European history and politics at the University of Graz in Austria, says the HDZ, in addition to securing its voting bloc, is trying to mobilize its voters. “It serves, even if HDZ doesn’t have way with election law, as a way to mobilize troops and get support,” he says.

The electoral law is part of a low-grade political crisis created and perpetuated by several larger issues in Bosnia, including the failure to develop a new constitution.

“What Bosnia needs is a constitution,” Bieber says. “They’ve been operating with Dayton as a constitution for more than 20 years.”

The Dayton Accords were meant to end a war by placating warring ethno-nationalist leaders, but Annex 4 has been used to govern Bosnia for more than two decades. “Dayton is a great way to end a war but a lousy way to organize a state,” one former senior U.S. official agrees.

Yet supporting Dayton remains the pillar of U.S. policy toward the region.

“U.S. Government policy remains dedicated to supporting the people of [Bosnia] in upholding the Dayton Peace Accords, maintaining the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and promoting continued European integration,” wrote a State Department official in response to questions.

The State official also noted that any electoral law could not conflict with the Dayton Accords.

The resistance toward changing Dayton doesn’t just come from an international order; the country’s power brokers and political leaders, experts say, do not want to change the system because they stand to gain from furthering ethno-national divisions.

“There are too many people benefiting from the system as it is,” Eric Gordy, a professor at University College London’s School of Slavonic and East European Studies, says.

The EU was misguided in its belief that “the carrot of European integration was sufficient for local power brokers to give up patronage networks,” says one Western diplomat in the Balkans, who spoke to FP on the condition of anonymity. “The system that lets them maintain power is an ethno-national system.”

Dodik is one such power broker. In the past two years under his rule, Republika Srpska brought in thousands of rifles, and there are currently 78 Russian-allied nationalist organizations in the region.

“I’m not at all convinced that Dodik in the next year won’t try basically to pull off a Transnistria scenario,” Mujanovic says, referring to the Russian-backed breakaway region of Moldova. Bieber says he sees Dodik’s strategy not as secession but as a way to “gradually have the state wither away.” He continues: “At the end of the day, it’s a very fragile house of cards, and it just requires a little breath of air, and it will collapse on itself.”

While Washington and Brussels take a back seat to the brewing crisis, Belgrade and Zagreb both have dogs in this fight, and Moscow and Ankara are growing increasingly influential. “Russia has been very, very active in the country, in Republika Srpska,” says Valentino Grbavac, an associate at the Institute for Social and Political Research in Mostar, Bosnia. “They own all of the oil and gas industry, they do retraining with police force — they have really vested interest.”

Nor is Russia the only outside power interested in meddling. “You have Turkey doing similar things [in the Federation] with the Bosniaks, helping political candidates, funding them,” Grbavac says.

It isn’t the threat of war that scares people but rather the idea that a low-grade conflict will break out. “I don’t think that what’s around the corner is war,” Mujanovic says, offering that what he sees coming is a “very significant degree of instability that may feature low-intensity conflict.”

While some are wary that the United States should get involved, others see it as the one country — with its history in Bosnia, role in creating the Dayton Accords, and trust from the Bosnian population — that might be able to mitigate the conflict.

“With sufficient Western attention, the political stalemate in Bosnia could be managed to avoid a full-blown crisis,” the former senior U.S. official says. “It’s a discrete issue that is not necessarily solvable, but it is manageable.”

Mujanovic points out that the sanctioning of Dodik in January 2017 in the last days of President Barack Obama’s administration, which was otherwise largely absent from the Balkans, “made a huge, huge difference.”

“The price point for stabilizing this country — recommitting to [a] substantive project of democratization, reform — that price point is actually still remarkably low,” he says. But “that price point is evaporating very quickly.”

Yet it’s unlikely that the United States under President Donald Trump, which is focused on hot spots such as North Korea and Iran, is going to get more involved in Bosnia or the Balkans anytime soon.
Bieber acknowledges that the United States has leverage and credibility in the country but says it has been a weak actor in the region. Obama was largely absent, and with the Trump administration, “even that kind of support is unclear.”

Nor will there necessarily be senior State Department staffers in place to support Bosnia in potentially pivotal 2018 elections. Hoyt Yee, the widely renowned deputy assistant secretary for European and Eurasian affairs, who was responsible for Central and South Central Europe, recently left that position.

That leaves Bosnia where it has been: in a state of political paralysis, as the country’s political problems both continue and worsen, and without the attention of much of the Western world.
The Balkans, the former senior U.S. official says, “fell off the map during the Obama administration, and it’s still off the map.”

FP’s Dan De Luce contributed to this report.

Spy row aggravates as US, EU expel over 100 Russian diplomats


March 27, 2018
LONDON: The United States, Canada and 16 European countries announced the expulsion of over 100 Russian diplomats on Monday in an expression of solidarity with Britain over a nerve agent attack on a former Russian spy in England earlier this month. The coordinated announcements meant that the expulsion would be the biggest such move by the West against Moscow since the height of the Cold War.
In Washington, the White House said it would expel 60 Russians, joining governments across Europe in punishing the Kremlin for the Salisbury attack that they have blamed on Moscow.
It was the strongest action that US President Donald Trump had taken against Russia since coming to office. He has been criticised by Democrats and members of his own Republican Party for failing to be tough enough on Russia over allegations that it had meddled in the US electoral system, including the 2016 presidential campaign.
British Prime Minister Theresa May, welcoming the show of solidarity, said 18 countries had announced plans to expel Russian officials. Those included 14 European Union countries, as well as Ukraine, Canada and Albania.
Moscow punished for an alleged nerve agent attack on a spy in England
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson tweeted that Monday’s “extraordinary international response by our allies stands in history as the largest collective expulsion of Russian intelligence officers ever and will help defend our shared security”.
Prime Minister Theresa May said the coordinated measures “clearly demonstrate that we all stand shoulder to shoulder in sending the strongest signal to Russia that it cannot continue to flout international law”.
Russia’s foreign ministry called the actions a “provocative gesture”. The Kremlin spokesman said the West’s response was a “mistake” and that Russian President Vladimir Putin would make a final decision about Moscow’s response.
Moscow has denied being behind the attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the southern English city of Salisbury on March 4. Skripal, 66, and his 33-year-old daughter Yulia were found unconscious on a public bench in a shopping centre, and remain critically ill in hospital.
Monday’s wave of expulsions came after EU leaders said last week that evidence presented by May of Russian involvement in the attack was a solid basis for further action.
The staff expelled by the United States included 12 intelligence officers from Russia’s mission to the United Nations headquarters in New York, a senior administration official told reporters. Trump also ordered the closure of the Russian consulate in Seattle.
“To the Russian government we say: when you attack our friends, you will face serious consequences,” one of the US officials briefing reporters said.
The individuals concerned and their families have been given a week to leave the United States, according to the official.
Trump, who before he took office in January last year promised warmer ties with Putin, last week congratulated the Russian leader on his re-election, drawing criticism from Republicans and Democrats alike. Trump said the two leaders had made tentative plans to meet in the not too distant future.
US lawmakers largely welcomed Trump’s move on Monday.
The closure of the Russian consulate in Seattle was due to its proximity to a US submarine base as well as planemaker and defence contractor Boeing, a senior administration official said. Seattle was a hub of Russian cyber espionage, both political and commercial, according to two intelligence officials.
The UN mission in New York was also a major centre for Russian financial spying and recruiting, the officials said. The New York operations included money laundering and other financial crimes in addition to espionage on US and UN targets, they added.
All the Russians picked for expulsion from the United States have been identified as intelligence officers, according to officials familiar with the expulsions.
“The last time that the United States expelled so many Russian spies was when the Reagan administration ordered 55 Soviet diplomats out of the country in 1986,” said Angela Stent, director of the Centre for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies at Georgetown University.
This US solidarity with Britain and other European allies after the Skripal poisoning is unprecedented in the post-Soviet era and highlights the continuing downward spiral of Russia’s relations with the West, Angela Stent said.
The US officials said the scale of the expulsions was based not only on the expansion of Russian espionage in the United States, but also on its increasing focus on critical infrastructure targets such as electrical grids, financial networks, transportation and healthcare.
Skripal’s poisoning, alleged to have employed the Soviet-era military-grade nerve agent Novichok, is the first known offensive use of a nerve toxin in Europe since World War Two.
RUSSIA PROMISES ‘SYMMETRICAL’ RESPONSE
European Council President Donald Tusk said further measures could be taken in the coming weeks and months. Mexico said it reserved the right to expel diplomats.
Russia said it would respond in kind.
“The response will be symmetrical. We will work on it in the coming days and will respond to every country in turn,” the RIA news agency cited an unnamed foreign ministry source as saying.
The Russian embassy in the United States asked Twitter followers to vote what US consulates they would close in Russia, if they could decide. Besides the embassy in Moscow, the United States has three consulate generals in Russia.
The Kremlin has accused Britain of whipping up an anti-Russia campaign and has sought to cast doubt on the British analysis that Moscow was responsible. Russia has already ordered 23 British diplomats out of the country after Britain expelled 23 Russian diplomats.
Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova suggested in a post on Facebook that the EU’s expression of support for Britain was misguided given that it would be leaving the bloc next year.
A British court has said Skripal and his daughter may have suffered brain damage, while a policeman who went to help them has also indicated that he has suffered lasting damage to his health.
British Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson hailed the support for Britain during a visit to Estonia on Monday. Britain has troops there as part of a Nato mission to deter any Russian aggression following its seizure of Ukraine’s Crimea in 2014.
Published in Dawn, March 27th, 2018

South African woman jailed in landmark ruling for racist rant

Vicki Momberg sentenced to three years, with one year suspended, for directing offensive slurs at police officer

 Vicki Momberg wiped away tears as judge Pravina Rugoonandan read the ruling in a Johannesburg court on Wednesday. Photograph: YouTube

Reuters in Johannesburg-
A white woman has been jailed in South Africa for yelling racist abuse at a black police officer, in a case that laid bare attitudes that endure more than two decades after the end of apartheid.
In a ruling that lawyers believed to be the first prison term imposed in South Africa for verbal racial abuse, estate agent Vicki Momberg was sentenced to three years, with one year suspended, for directing offensive slurs at the officer. Previously people convicted of the same crime have been fined.
A video clip went viral following the incident in 2016 when the police officer tried to help Momberg after thieves broke into her car at night at a shopping centre.
It showed her saying she wanted to be helped by a white or ethnic Indian officer, and that black people were “plain and simple useless” and “they are clueless”.
In her rant, she several times called the policeman a “kaffir”, apartheid-era slang for a black person and one of the worst terms of hate speech in South Africa.
Momberg wiped away tears as judge Pravina Rugoonandan read the ruling in a Johannesburg court on Wednesday, finding her guilty on four counts. Momberg’s lawyer, Kevin Lawlor, said she would seek the right to appeal against her sentence.
The episode highlighted how 24 years after Nelson Mandela became South Africa’s first black president, espousing reconciliation, the country is still struggling with race relations.
Despite the emergence of a black middle class, income gaps remain clearly visible along race lines, fuelling perceptions of white privilege. Black people make up 80% of South Africa’s population of 54 million, but most its wealth remains in the hands of white people, who account for about 8%.
The justice minister, Michael Masutha, said the custodial sentence could serve as a deterrent to others. “It was a question of escalating and intensifying the fight against racism by finding even more sterner measures,” he told eNCA television.
Johannesburg-based criminal lawyer Zola Majavu, who was not involved in the case, said: “This case has been put on the spotlight, it may be the first time – at least that I’m aware of – that a person has been sentenced to jail without the option of a fine for such action.”
In October, two white farmers who had been filmed pushing a wailing black man into a coffin were sentenced to jail for attempted murder, assault and kidnapping.
In 2016, a court ordered Penny Sparrow, a white woman, to pay 150,000 rand ($9,941 or £9,000) to charity after she was found guilty of hate speech for referring to black people as “monkeys” in a Facebook post.
The countries that trust Facebook the most are also the most vulnerable to its mistakes



The ConversationMarch 27, 2018 6.42am EDT
The latest shoe has dropped on Facebook: Private data on 50 million users found its way to a shadowy research outfit, Global Science Research, and then on to Cambridge Analytica, a political consulting firm launched by former White House adviser Steve Bannon.
Zuckerberg has come out with a mea culpa for this latest breach of digital trust. But his company’s globally dispersed user base presents a challenge. Every month, over 2 billion users worldwide log in to Facebook.
How does Zuckerberg convert his apology into action, while respecting the vastly differing circumstances that his network – the ultimate social network – connects? It can be difficult for global platforms like Facebook to consistently rebuild trust, when attitudes toward privacy vary so widely across the world.
Consider some of the essential differences that Zuckerberg must brush up on. (After all, he did miss a few essential classes since he dropped out of Harvard prematurely.) Let’s call it the beginning of a cheat sheet on “digital anthropology.”

Digital trust

I led a study of digital trust across 42 countries. We measured trust in four ways: users’ attitudes toward technology and related companies; users’ behaviors and tolerance for “frictions” in completing digital transactions; the trustworthiness of the digital infrastructure; and users’ overall experience.
We discovered great differences in how much consumers trust the digital companies, the media they read online and how their personal information is handled by internet companies.
In countries that are generally not as advanced digitally but moving up the curve quickly – such as Malaysia, Colombia, India and Indonesia – users appear more trusting. In general, they are more willing to tolerate “frictions” in their digital experience, either because of poorer network quality or delays in completing digital financial transactions.
In many more advanced countries, trust in technology is low and falling. In a 2014 Pew survey, for example, only 11 percent of Americans were very or somewhat confident that social media and digital video sites were capable of keeping their data secure and private.
In the past couple of years, attitudes across 28 developed countries such as the U.S. have worsened. Trust in the media is at an all-time low of 43 percent.
Consumers around the world also vary widely in the level of privacy that they would prefer or find acceptable. In response to a Pew survey question, 85 percent of Germans favored the more stringent European data privacy standards, while only 29 percent of American respondents felt the same.

Vulnerability

Let’s look again at the less technologically evolved, but rapidly developing countries – the countries that appear to trust the internet more.
It turns out that these countries also tend to have less trustworthy digital environments. Infrastructure is underdeveloped and limited, with poorer security protections, particularly when it comes to user data in financial transactions.
Other than China, an outlier in this group, these countries are the biggest growth opportunities for digital players such as Facebook. These markets are growing quickly, particularly on mobile devices, and represent some of the world’s largest populations.
These traits are all critical for companies that rely on a mobile advertising-based business model. Mobile advertising accounted for more than 90 percent of Facebook’s revenue growth since 2012 and delivers 88 percent of its current revenues. In 2017, the company made over US$40 billion in revenue.
Of the top 10 countries with the most Facebook users, only two are digitally highly evolved. These two nations, the U.S. and the U.K., collectively account for 13 percent of all Facebook users. The remaining eight account for 41 percent of all Facebook users.
What’s more, of the top 10 cities with the largest number of active Facebook users as of July 2017, all are in the digitally less evolved world.

Digital dependence

Not every society leans on the internet in the same way or for the same needs.
Consider the recent concerns about “fake news” on social media. In the majority of the 38 countries studied in the Pew Spring 2017 Global Attitudes Survey, at least a quarter of the population got its news from social media.
That said, the patterns of dependence vary widely. In Indonesia, no one aged 50 years and above reported getting news from social media. In South Korea, 45 percent of people in the age bracket do. Some countries, like Vietnam, exhibit a massive digital generation gap: There, over 80 percent of those aged 18 to 29 get their news from social media, versus just 3 percent of those over 50.
Also, users in a given country can vary widely in the basic ways they behave on social media, depending on factors like economic status and gender. For example, according to one study, more women prefer to use profile pictures and spend more time than men looking at pages of others of their gender.
Since the way people receive their news varies so widely across demographic strata and geographies, fixing the fake news problem will not be easy. Neither will it be easy to address concerns over how personal data is used, as in the Cambridge Analytica case. What may look like inadequate control and oversight in some parts of the world may be considered an overreach in others.

Apology into action

Zuckerberg is catching up with the uncomfortable fact that the ultimate social network he invented is making connections that he may not ever have imagined.
Whatever solutions the good folks at Facebook devise – or have thrust upon them by regulators and lawmakers – must work not just for the more recently outraged American or the already skeptical European user. The solutions must work for the world from where Facebook picked up its second billion users, and is looking to pick up its third.
Cambridge Analytica has its tentacles in elections in lands far beyond the U.S. According to the case studies on its website, it has played a role in crucial elections in India and Kenya, as well as Colombia, Indonesia, Malaysia, South Africa and Thailand. All of these are countries coming up the digital evolution curve. If you were worried about the “Facebook effect” on American elections, just imagine the potential for mischief across these highly vulnerable countries.
Since Facebook depends entirely on advertising revenue, it cannot institute total data privacy measures throughout all its markets in one fell swoop. This might throttle its ability to accumulate and monetize as much data as possible on its users. Despite the contrite messages today and promises to fix things from Facebook, to maintain its business model, the company will have to be more selective in where it applies more stringent data privacy standards. In my view, it’s likely to institute measures calibrated to be just “good enough” for the context.

It’s too bad that Zuckerberg is getting his deferred liberal arts education in digital anthropology at some cost to 2 billion and counting users, as well as democratic institutions around the world. I can only hope that he is a quick study.

Myanmar: Army continues its Offensive against Kachins- a setback to Peace efforts?

Two areas have specifically come under intensive attacks from the Burmese Army- one around the Tanai Township (also pronounced as Danai and Tanaing) on the LEDO Road and another around Sumprabhum on the road from Myitikkyina to Putao.

by Dr. S. Chandrasekharan-
( March 27, 2018, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) In our paper 6350 dated 19 Feb 2018 we have mentioned that fighting between the Myanmar Army (Tatmadaw) and the Kachins had intensified and that the offensive instead of bringing around the KIA to signing the agreement would only result in throwing them in the lap of the Chinese through the newly formed FNPCC (Federal Political Negotiation and Consultation Committee) led by the Chinese supported UWSA (United Wa State Army).
On 13th Feb. two ethnic armed organisations of the now marginalised UNFC (United Nationalities Federal Council) the New Mon State Party (NMSP) and the Lahu Democratic Union (LDU) signed the nationwide cease fire agreement sponsored by the Government amidst great fanfare with all the important dignitaries including the State Counsellor and the Army Chief attending and addressing the function.
Since 25th January, fighting between the Army and the Kachins escalated to new levels and probably the offensive was to bring round the KIA to sign the agreement. After a lull, a second offensive on KIA controlled areas appears to have started in the first week of March.
Two areas have specifically come under intensive attacks from the Burmese Army- one around the Tanai Township (also pronounced as Danai and Tanaing) on the LEDO Road and another around Sumprabhum on the road from Myitikkyina to Putao.
The KIA is said to have withdrawn from the mining areas of Tanai and its Battalion 14 from its base which was the target of Army. Even as recent as 23rd March clashes have been going between the Army and the KIA and it is said that Army has been using heavy artillery to clear the area. The United Nations and its humanitarian partners have expressed concern over the fighting and about the safety of the civilians affected.
It may be recalled that at the instance of the Chinese representative Sun Guoxiang, representatives of the Burmese Army and the KIA met on Feb 1st- the first of its kind after the cease fire between the two was broken in 2011. The talks ended in agreeing for further talks but in the meeting, the Burmese Army representatives wanted the KIA to vacate and dismantle certain of the formations created by the KIA after the Cease fire was broken in 2011. This was not agreed to, as the contention of the KIA was that once the cease fire is broken with renewed offensive, the KIA is free to strengthen itself. It is also said from sources close to the KIA that the Army’s offensive is a reflection of their opposition to the presence of KIA in northern Shan areas. It is known that historically, the KIA has had a presence in the northern Shan for a very long time.
An interesting and detailed article by a knowledgeable person who writes under the pseudonym Joe Kumbun throws some light on the reasons for the Army’s offensive against four brigades and a battalion of the KIA.
First, is that the Tatmadaw has recently strengthened itself by acquiring fighter jets from Russia and in fact these jets have already conducted air strikes on one formation of KIA. Given the increase in the fighting strength of the Tatmadaw and the creation of new brigades by the KIA, fighting is bound to continue and escalate in the near future.
Second, the offensive is perhaps meant to increase pressure on KIO to sign the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement. This in my view is very unlikely but instead it would only make the KIA become more dependent on the UWSA led alliance and thus to China.
Third, the offensive is meant to be a warning to other non-signatories of the NCA like the AA, TNLA, MNDAA and even the UWSA- the biggest one with over 40,000 fighting cadres in its strength. This again is very unlikely with China holding the key to reconciliation.
The suggestions made by Joe Kumbun for resolving the conflict are very valid and could be tried without any outside interference. These include
One, De-escalation of fighting and establishment of peace in Kachin areas should be the first priority. The cease fire agreement of 1994 was unfortunately broken by the offensive of Tatmadaw in 2011 and more it continues less will be the chances of ethnic reconciliation now being pursued by Suu kyi.
Second, the Army should show some magnanimity and accept a role for the FPNCC in political dialogue and objections to the AA, TNLA and MNDAA participating in the political dialogue should be dropped. Already the UWSA is talking to the government as we will see later, but the objection of the Army over the inclusion of other groups like AA etc. in the political dialogue has some substance. What is the guarantee that more groups may mushroom and go for an umbrella protection under the UWSA even if these groups are now allowed? It is a question of principle.
Last, that the Government and the Army should invite the KIO and other armed groups for the third Panglong Conference due to be held soon. This is doable and can be pursued.
There was a mild flutter and even astonishment when a member of the government’s peace commission announced that the United Wa State Army (UWSA) and the Mongla group (NDAA) had accepted the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement only to be quickly denied by the UWSA subsequently. What perhaps would have happened is that both the government and UWSA may be in touch with each other to explore ways to continue the political dialogue. Even here the problem is that the government as yet is unwilling to recognise the umbrella coalition of FPNCC as a group while willing to deal with the groups individually!

‘Prison Island’ of the Rohingya: New island for refugees threatened by monsoon

-27 Mar 2018Asia Correspondent
It’s been six months since the mass exodus of Rohingya refugees began as the Myanmar military and Buddhist vigilantes turned on the Muslims of Rakhine State. Since then, 700,000 have escaped into Bangladesh to join more than 300,000 others who’d fled earlier. Jonathan Miller is there, finding out if a remote uninhabited island, prone to sinking, is really the answer.

It
Senior UN officials privately express fears it could become a “prison island.”‘s been six months since the mass exodus of Rohingya refugees began as the Myanmar military and Buddhist vigilantes turned on the Muslims of Rakhine State. Since then, 700,000 have escaped into Bangladesh to join more than 300,000 others who’d fled earlier.
Aid agencies are working to protect their over-crowded camps from the ravages of imminent monsoon rains.
With Bangladesh unwilling to forcibly repatriate the refugees to Burma, it’s moving ahead with a highly controversial plan to relocate them instead to a remote island in the Bay of Bengal.

First women's yoga training center opens doors in Gaza


Nidal al-Mughrabi-MARCH 28, 2018

GAZA (Reuters) - A small group of Palestinian women in Gaza are stretching their limbs with yoga to help them teach others to cope with the stresses and traumas of living in the embattled territory.
The Gaza Strip, which is dominated by the Islamist Hamas faction, has experienced three wars with neighboring Israel in the past 11 years.

There are few recreational activities for women in the densely-populated enclave of two million people, which is under a blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt and has the highest unemployment rate on earth.

Amal Khayal, who teaches the class in a makeshift gym and also heads women’s activities for Italian charity Cooperazione Internazionale Sud Sud (CISS), said the project was aimed at training some 30 women to teach.


 “We are trying to use physical activities to help release psychological pressures so that women here can form a support network for one another,” Khayal told Reuters during one of her classes.

Some of the participants are also involved in learning juggling. Nineteen will become yoga instructors and 13 will learn to teach circus tricks, Khayal said, adding that more women had expressed a wish to participate in future classes.

“Everyone in Gaza, specially women, needs yoga because we live in a tough place. There are no entertainment facilities where we can unload our depressions which come in addition to our daily life issues,” said Amina Al-Zraiay, a sports teacher and occupational therapist.

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Evidence unfolding before courts on Lasantha's Murder


2018-03-28 

The unfolding evidence the Criminal Investigation Department is now gathering reveals how the former Head of Sri Lanka Police is alleged to have had in his possession the most vital evidence which was destroyed to thwart the investigations conducted into the brutal murder of former Editor of The Sunday Leader Lasantha Wickrematunge. 


  • The DIG had then instructed Sugathapala to remove the pages of the GCIB where he had entered the notes
  • It was at that point that DIG Nanayakkara had warned Sugathapala and revealed that he was following a directive
  • According to Adikari, he and Sugathapala had become helpless and the pages of the GCIB had been removed
  • Adikari has further stated how DIG Nanayakkara told him that the IGP had wanted to destroy the evidence leading to Wickrematunge’s murder
  • On October 10, 2016, the CID got the relatives of these two Tamil youths to identify the dead using the pictures of the charred bodies


‘We’ Need An ‘Ethical Revolution’

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Rishard Najimudeen
Reforming a society is not an easy and convenient process as many of us think, but it requires a long term and perseverance from each and every one of particular society without any exception. As an initial step, the society must be educated continuously on the concepts of “pluralism and diversity” due to its consistency of various groups, approaches and interpretations. It is impossible to march forward in the reforming progress unless a society instils in its people the value of accepting ‘others’ and ‘Non-’. The society will be able to take further steps if it could initiate and operate a new “we” successfully that includes all people irrespective of the religion, ethnicity, race, caste and status. Taking this very basic understanding into our consideration, we move to some fields where major crises exist in order to come out with a very comprehensive framework.
For several decades, our country has been struggling with major issues in various disciplines. Particularly, after eradicating the three decades of war, the governmental institutions and private organizations funnelled all their efforts to uplift the country. But, it is unfortunate to see our country to be stagnant at the point where we used to be during the civil war without finding proper mechanisms by which primary obstacles should have been uprooted. For instance, Mass-Media with its different dimension deems one of the power institutional spaces in our country. However, number of problematic questions over its reliability is still prevailed without having a serious discussion on it or long term strategies in order to find meaningful answers.
Some statistics related to internet usage have revealed a negative and unhealthy trend of our nation, particularly trend of our youngsters. Sri Lanka, for the fifth consecutive year, topped the list of countries that searched for the word “Sex” in Google. Interestingly, the search shows a spike during the months of August and December, which are obviously school holidays. This information clearly points out that the collective mentality of our young generation on gender relationship is very dangerous as well as unhealthy. In psychological perspective, it would be very difficult for a student who gets addiction to pornography, to concentrate on his or her studies. The question how we are going to deal with this issue is one of the key questions of present days.
Similarly, environment related issues have predominantly grabbed the attention of several groups due to its recent phenomena and deadly impacts on human life. We can summarise the problems as follow: Deforestation, soil erosion, wildlife threatened by urbanization, coastal degradation, freshwater resources being polluted by industrial waste and sewage runoff, waste disposal and air pollution in cities and suburbs due to emissions from vehicles, factories and other industrial establishments. In the early period of 20th century, Sri Lanka had a 49 percent forest across the island but by the year of 2005 this percentage had fallen approximately by 20 percent. Within a decade particularly between 1990 and 2000, Sri Lanka lost an average of 26800 hectares of forest per year. This amounts to 1.14 percent of average annual deforestation rate. During 2000 and 2005 periods the rate increased yet further until 1.43 percent per annum. These statistics and data clearly illustrate the fact that the whole nation is likely to encounter a great challenge in near future if we do not pay proper concern on environmental issues. It is worthy to ask again how we are going to deal with these issues.
It is very obvious that the economic issues of Sri Lanka, is pathetic. Debt burden and corruption are two transparent evidences. Initiating new projects such as highway, port-city and airport in order to develop the infrastructure of the nation has plunged Sri Lanka into a pit of debt, pushing the country to the brink of bankruptcy and prompting an IMF to bailout. According to a statement which was revealed last year, the official estimate of what Sri Lanka currently owes its financiers is $64.9 billion – $8 billion of which is owned by China. The country’s debt to GDP stands around 75% and approximately 95% of all government revenue is currently going towards debt repayment. Conversely, corruption and Bribery have emerged as one of the big issues in Sri Lanka. According to Transparency International, Sri Lanka is ranked 79 amid other 174 countries in the corruption index for last year. Particularly, most corruptions and briberies are carried out by the officials who are in respectable positions. It is also very sad to state that whenever we read a local newspaper, there would be a case related to either corruption or bribery. As we all know that corruption distorts the democratic process as well as violates the basic human rights. Working against the corruptions is not only limited to one or two organizations, but media, organizations, academics, journalists and civil society should involve in this process and come forward even to minimize the frequent occurrence of such crimes to certain extent.
As such, our country has witnessed a dramatic behavioural change in social sphere such as drug addiction and wrong gender relationship. According to some records, Sri Lanka’s daily consumption of drugs amounts to 450 million rupees and it is estimated that there are more than 250,000 youths addicted to drugs, as said by the Dangerous Drug Control Board. A valuable research, conducted by Dr Silva and P Fonseka, reveals that a majority (70.1%) started using drugs when they were in the age group 10-20. It is a clear indication that drug addiction has become a glaring problem of the country and negative consequences will be appeared if we do not involve in protecting our young generation from drug usage and drug mafia.

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Danger of pushing govt. to point of no-return 




By Jehan Perera-March 26, 2018

The ongoing deliberations of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva have not yielded any surprises. Delivering a joint statement on behalf of Macedonia, Montenegro, the United States and the United Kingdom during the UN High Commissioner's report on Sri Lanka, held on 21 March 2018 in Geneva, the UK said Sri Lanka was safer and freer than it had been in 2015. However, it added that it was disappointed that the pace of progress had been slow. It stated, "Much still remains to be done to implement Sri Lanka's commitments. We remain concerned about reports of abuse of authority by some security officials. And multiple incidents of inter-communal violence, attacks, and hate speech against minorities are alarming and demonstrate the need for reconciliation efforts.

"As Sri Lanka acknowledged with its co-sponsorship of resolution 30/1, devolution of political authority through constitutional reform is integral to lasting reconciliation and non-recurrence of violations and abuses. Families of disappeared persons from all communities have waited too long for answers. We urge that the Office of Missing Persons be fully operational without delay, and for meaningful steps to establish the other transitional justice mechanisms outlined in resolution 30/1. Effective security sector reforms, repeal of the Prevention of Terrorism Act, and release of more military-occupied land to civilian ownership, will all help build trust and confidence."

Although the sessions of the UNHRC in Geneva no longer occupy media headlines as they did in the past when the previous Sri Lankan government used the occasion to confront the international community, they continue to be important. Unfortunately this does not mean that the country is able to deal successfully with the issues identified in the resolution. The suspicions and mistrust that continue to undermine inter ethnic relations within the country are an obstruction to their implementation. The TNA and the Tamil Diaspora represented by the Global Tamil Forum have been urging the UNHRC in Geneva to extend the period of their scrutiny of the implementation of the resolution. This is because of their concern that if such international scrutiny ceases there will be even less incentive for the government to continue with the task.

DIFFICULT CONTEXT

Last year the Sri Lankan government requested the UNHRC to grant it a two-year extension in which to deliver on the commitments it had made at the October 2015 session. The council extended reporting on the implementation of its recommendations for an additional two years to allow the government to make the progress needed. However, the resolution of October 2015 is a very comprehensive one that envelops the entirely of Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict. These are issues that have failed to be solved in the past. The past practice has been that the opposition parties unite to thwart the effort. The National Unity government that was formed in January 2015 gave hope that this problem could be surmounted because the two main political parties were in partnership.

One of the most unfortunate features of the present time is that the government alliance shows signs of disintegration. This is on account of the rivalry between the two parties including their leaderships that shows no signs of abating, and for which statesmanship is required if it is to be overcome. The debilitated condition of the government was seen in its poor electoral performance at the local government elections held last month. The opposition parties made use of the co-signed resolution to allege that the government was too subservient to foreign powers to conduct an emotive campaign against the government. It used arguments of nationalism, patriotism and betrayal that showed its potential to sweep the government off its feet at other national elections to come.

In this difficult context, there is a positive role that the international community can play. Its nurturing role of can be seen in the manner in which specialized international agencies have taken on responsibility for supporting the establishment of viable reconciliation mechanisms that the government has promised. It would be more constructive for the international community to be supportive rather than add to the pressures on the government in a manner that would further undermine it electorally. An example of constructive support would be the role played by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

For many years this organization has played a key role in gaining humanitarian access to the war zones of the North and East and even now for looking into the issue of missing persons. Sri Lanka was one of the 18 countries invited by the ICRC earlier this month to participate in an international conference to discuss challenges related to humanitarian access and negotiation in Asia. Topics for discussion during the conference included the growing role of faith-based organization and religious leaders in times of conflict and humanitarian crisis. The potential of the Office of Missing Persons that the government has recently established and the role that the ICRC can play in this was discussed.

Similarly the International Organisation of Migration (IOM), one of the specialized UN agencies in Sri Lanka recently held an international conference on the role of reparations in the transitional justice process. The cabinet approved the draft law that will establish an Office of Reparations, as pledged by the government in terms of the UNHRC resolution of October 2015. At the conference examples from other conflict-ridden countries where reparations had been used to meet the needs of victims and to send a message of care to those who had been victims from all sides were discussed. This type of collaboration between international and national experts points to the way forward in the transitional justice process.

PARTNERSHIP MEANS …

The UNHRC resolution of October 2015 is a comprehensive one. It deals with the two most controversial political issues in the country. The first is that it sets out a framework of transitional justice that is meant to take countries from situations of violence and state breakdown to an improved state of peace with justice. Accordingly four mechanisms have been proposed, particularly to deal with the past. The UNHRC resolution prescribes the establishment of an Office of Missing Persons, an Office of Reparations, a Truth Commission and also a special judicial accountability mechanism (Special Court) that has international participation. It also presents the need for constitutional reform in which devolution of power could be improved.

The need for an extended time frame arises from the highly contentious nature of some parts of the resolution and to which the Sri Lankan government agreed in October 2015. The issue of constitutional reform and the sharing and devolution of power has been on the national agenda for many decades but without success. It is unrealistic to expect a problem that has lasted for 70 years to be resolved in a matter of two plus years. Similarly the issue of setting up a special court with international participation to punish those guilty of human rights violations and war crimes in the course of fighting the war against the LTTE is politically controversial. Both President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe have publicly gone on record that there will be no hybrid court with foreign judges witting alongside Sri Lankan judges to decide on the culpability of Sri Lankan security forces.

At the recently concluded local government elections, the opposition made use of both the issues of war crimes and constitutional reform to blame the government for betraying the armed forces and the country and taking it in the direction of division. The significance of the co-signing of the UNHRC resolution in October 2015 was that the international community and the Sri Lankan government became partners in the endeavour to bring reconciliation to the country. The experience of other countries is that such accountability processes are either unsuccessful or take place after the passage of many years, when the issues are no longer so emotive and controversial. A partnership is about mutually supporting each other to achieve the fulfillment of the objectives of the partnership. It is not about one partner pushing another partner to the brink where the possibility of no-return looms large.