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, April 17, 2018

Who’s fighting whom in Syria?

The question’s simple – the answer is only getting more complicated. Here’s a video explainer of what you need to know.

The Crisis is Only in its Beginning Stages

Russia said that if Washington’s attack harmed its citizens, there would be military consequences, but Russia did not protect its ally Syria from the attack.

by Paul Craig Roberts- 
( April 18, 2018, Washington DC, Sri Lanka Guardian) Many, including Russia’s President Putin, have asked why the US launched an illegal attack on Syria prior to the chemical weapons inspectors examining the site of the alleged chemical attack.
This popular question completely misses the point. The US attack on Syria is a clear and indisputable war crime against a sovereign country regardless of whether Syria used a chemical weapon in driving the Washington supported terrorists from Douma. No one acted to stop Washington’s war crime. Some of Washington’s vassals, such as Germany and Italy, refused to participate in Washington’s war crime, but no one attempted to block it. The impotent UN Security Council, to which Russia is wasting its time appealing, the EU, NATO, Russia and China themselves did nothing to stop Washington’s Nazi era war crime.
Russia said that if Washington’s attack harmed its citizens, there would be military consequences, but Russia did not protect its ally Syria from the attack.
Perhaps it doesn’t matter as Washington’s attack was carefully conducted so as to have no effect except to serve as a face-saver for Trump. Apparently no one was killed and no damage was done to anything real except to a facility in which anti-venom for snake bites was being produced.
On the other hand, it does matter, because of the perception that the American presstitutes have created that it was a great victory for America over the evil Syrian government and the evil Russian government that supports them. This perception, which the presstitutes have created with their fake news, justifies the war crime and will lead to more attacks on Syria.
It is unlikely that the UN Security Council will condemn Washington, which pays 25% of the UN’s budget. Moreover, the Security Council is loaded up with Washington’s vassals, and they will not vote to censure their liegelord. Putin is wasting his time taking the matter to the Security Council, unless his purpose is to prove that every Western institution is completely corrupt. As most informed people already know this, I don’t understand the point of proving the known. Putin should read Eric Zuesse’s article before he puts too much faith in the UN.
As I have written on a number of occasions, I admire Putin’s Christian character of sidestepping the beatings he continuously takes from Washington in order to save the world from the massive deaths of a world war. The problem is that by turning the other cheek, Putin encourages more aggression from Washington. Putin is dealing with neoconservative psychopaths. He is not dealing with common sense.
During the entirety of the Cold War no US ambassador to the UN spoke aggressively and disrespectfully to the Soviet representative as Nikki Haley speaks to the Russian ambassador. During the Cold War no American president would have tolerated Nikki Haley. The crazed bitch would have instantly been fired.
The Russian government is captured by delusion if the Russians believe that the US government, in which Nikki Haley is Trump’s choice to be America’s spokesperson to the world, in which the crazed neoconservative war monger John Bolton is a principal influence over US military and foreign policy, and in which the President himself is under threat of indictment for wanting to normalize relations with Russia, has any prospect of avoiding war.
The best chance of preventing the oncoming war is Russian-Chinese-Iranian unity and a defeat for American arms in a regional context not worth the Washington psychopaths launching of nuclear weapons. Until Washington is effectively resisted, Washington’s European vassals, the UN Security Councit and the OPCW will stand with Washington. Once Washington experiences a defeat, NATO will dissolve and with this dissolution Washington’s ability to threaten other countries will lose its cover and evaporate.

Kill, But Not With Chemical Weapons 

Dr. Ameer Ali
logoThe one hundred or so missile attacks by the US, UK and France on Syria sent one clear message not only to Syria but to every other tyrant, including those on the American side. That message was: you can kill and massacre your people in any way you want as our civilized friends do in Yemen and Palestine, but not with chemical weapons, because that is barbaric. What about, may we ask, when Saddam Hussain, when he was a “son of our bitch”, gassed thousands of Kurds? Well, that was in the past and Saddam has been hanged in any case. How more hypocritical can one become in playing the power game in international politics?
A tyrant is a tyrant whether that tyrant is one’s friend or enemy; a massacre is massacre and killing is killing, whether those massacres and killings are committed using conventional or unconventional weapons. But to pick and choose when and where to respond against a particular tyrant and a particular massacre by the so called defenders of freedom and civilization shows the height of political hypocrisy. Had the so called NATO humanitarian interventionists intervened early and prevented the escalation of Syrian uprising, long before the Russians were invited by Assad, the world would not have witnessed the almost daily horror scenes shown by the media. Unfortunately, for the champions of NATO, Syria does not possess oil in plenty as Libya does. Also, such intervention may have raised embarrassing questions about US-backed Saudi bombings in Yemen.
Assad may have used chemical weapons, but the evidence for it is only circumstantial. Even a few months earlier there was similar charges levelled against him but credible journalism exposed the canard. To go back further in history, before bombing Iraq Bush administration told the world that Saddam Hussain was roasting babies in the oven and that he had acquired a nuclear device that could explode within forty-five minutes. None of those accusations proved correct.  What we have seen is the repeated tactic that once the US manufactures a falsehood and get its media to spread it, US allies fall for it and joins in the action that follows.    
 Russia has warned that “there will be payback”. One can be rest assured that Russia’s response will not be militaristic. Here is a lesson that tyrants like Assad should learn when seeking support from another superpower. No two superpowers will clash against each other militarily on behalf of a client state because that would be suicidal. Even in the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, Soviet Union withdrew at the last minute to avoid a hot war with US. If USSR could not go to war with US in support of a foremost communist client, will Russia go to war with it now on behalf of a Muslim Syria? Superpowers have their own agendas drawn in their own national interests. This is why Israel has developed its own defence capabilities without having to depend on any outside power in times of need. Iran and North Korea are now trying to imitate Israel’s lead in this respect. 
The Syrian crisis must end, and end soon, to save the lives of millions of innocent people. For five years the Syrians are caught in a cycle of violence to which the vast majority of them is not a party. The situation is now becoming even more complicated with the intervention of Turkey, which is determined to exterminate the Kurdish militia. That militia is backed by the US, and Turkey is a US ally as well as a member of NATO. However, in Syria, Turkey believes that a friend of a friend is not necessarily a friend.  
One would have thought that the OIC, an international body with fifty-seven Muslim countries as members, will have the resources and skill to intervene and solve problems arising in and between Muslim countries. Alas! Caught in the Shia-Sunni sectarian muddle between Iran and Saudi Arabia, that body is as impotent as the divided UN. Once again, the highly touted slogan “lslam the Answer”, raised by moderate and militant Islamists in the 1980s, remains as hollow as ever.  

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‘Hannity Insanity’: Late-night hosts revel in Sean Hannity-Michael Cohen news


The legal team for President Trump's personal lawyer, Micheal Cohen, on April 16 identified Sean Hannity as a former client of Cohen's. 

 
It was as if the comedy gods were looking down on America’s late-night television hosts.

In court on Monday, the legal team for President Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, was forced to identify the name of a third Cohen client — a mystery person whom he initially didn’t want to name. The person, it turned out, was none other than the foil and foe of several late night-comedians: Fox News commentator Sean Hannity.

And TV comics such as Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel and Trevor Noah could not contain their excitement.

Here was a person they loved to criticize, a close informal adviser to Trump and firebrand conservative pundit who has lambasted special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation of Russian involvement in the 2016 presidential campaign. Hannity also has criticized the raid on Cohen’s office and home, never saying anything to his viewers about a personal, legal or business relationship with Cohen.

(Hannity denied the claim that Cohen represented him, saying he only had brief discussions with him about legal questions.).

Sean Hannity was revealed to be one of Michael Cohen’s clients, a relationship Hannity never disclosed. Cohen is President Trump’s personal attorney. 
The news broke at about 3 p.m. Monday, giving late-night comedians just enough time to squeeze in some giddy one-liners in honor of “Hannity Day,” as Trevor Noah dubbed it. Stephen Colbert went with a different banner: “Hannity Insanity.”

‘The Daily Show With Trevor Noah’ (Comedy Central)

With Hannity’s photo on the screen, Noah put his hands together as if in prayer, looking up to the sky while mouthing the words “thank you.”

“Yeah, it turns out Michael Cohen’s secret client was Sean Hannity, which I’m sorry, is not a good look,” Noah said with a chuckle. “You know right now Sean Hannity is probably on the phone with his wife like, ‘Hey honey, it’s so weird how I use the guy who pays off mistresses to get me out of that parking ticket.’”

Cohen has said he paid adult-film star Stormy Daniels $130,000 in late 2016 in exchange for her agreement not to discuss an alleged sexual encounter with Trump. Last week, news broke that Cohen also helped Elliott Broidy, then the Republican National Committee’s deputy finance chairman, negotiate a $1.6 million settlement with a former Playboy model whom he had impregnated during an affair.

Noah urged his audiences to consider “just how unethical” it is that Hannity continuously reported on the FBI raid without mentioning his own legal dealings with Cohen.

“Which, even for Sean Hannity is pretty shady,” Noah said. “Even Instagram models have higher ethical standards. They’ll be like ‘drink tummy tea, by the way, I’m sponsored by tummy tea.’”

The host played various clips during which Hannity discussed the FBI raids on Cohen’s office and residences, which he called an “unprecedented abuse of power.” In another clip, Hannity says: “If you voted for Donald Trump you better get buckled up because this is gonna be a rough ride.”
“Now, we can see that Hannity wasn’t just mad, he was scared,” Noah said. “You know, now that we know he was working with Cohen, that looks less like a news show and more like a guy really stressed, giving himself a pep talk.”



‘Late Show With Stephen Colbert’ (CBS)

Colbert described Cohen as a “New York attorney and sad neck with hair,” and referred to his client Broidy as “Donald Trump flattened out by a rolling pin.” When explaining that two different Playboy playmates were involved in the legal showdown, Colbert said, “I’m just glad Hef isn’t alive to see his life’s work dragged through the filth like this,” in reference to Playboy’s late founder, Hugh Hefner.

“Pro tip for the president,” Colbert also offered, “when your lawyer needs a lawyer, you need a lawyer.”

After he played a CNN clip revealing Hannity’s name as Cohen’s mysterious third client, Colbert suddenly disappeared from the camera frame. He reappeared slouching in an armchair, drinking a glass of red wine, rubbing his stomach, seemingly experiencing pure bliss.

“Jon Stewart, after the show, I’m gonna come over and we’re just going to spoon, just spoon,” Colbert said. “This is crazy.”

He was referencing his good friend and former colleague from the “The Daily Show,” who was known for his attacks on Fox News and his various feuds with Hannity. Stewart once called Hannity the “most loathsome dude” at Fox News.

“Cohen only has two other clients and all he does for them is pay off mistresses,” Colbert also said, “which raises the obvious question, who did Sean Hannity have sex with?”

Ahead of Colbert’s interview with James B. Comey, the comedian also spoofed ABC’s melodramatic teaser for its highly anticipated interview with the former FBI director, which aired Sunday.

“Are you going to answer any of these questions? Because right now you’re just making faces,” Colbert said in the exaggerated video, poking fun at the ABC trailer.

“Mr. Comey, I’m pregnant,” Colbert quipped. “And it’s not your baby. It’s Sean Hannity’s.”

‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ (ABC)

Earlier this month, Kimmel and Hannity were embroiled in a feud that played out both on their respective shows and on social media. After Kimmel joked on his show about first lady Melania Trump’s accent, Hannity called Kimmel a “despicable disgrace.” They exchanged insults on Twitter, with Hannity calling Kimmel a racist, pervert and “Harvey Weinstein jr.” and Kimmel making a gay sexual innuendo in reference to Hannity’s apparent love for President Trump.

After days of back-and-forth fighting, Kimmel apologized for the sex joke and tried to end the feud, saying the “level of vitriol” from both “is harmful to our country.”

But that didn’t stop Kimmel from reveling in the news Monday of Hannity’s relationship with Cohen.
“Shockingly,” Kimmel said, Cohen’s mystery third client “turned out to be my pal Sean Hannity.”
“Isn’t that interesting, that he would need advice from Michael Cohen,” Kimmel said.

Kimmel also criticized Hannity’s response to the news, in which he said Cohen has “never represented” him.

“I never retained him, received an invoice, or paid legal fees. I have occasionally had brief discussions with him about legal questions about which I wanted his input and perspective,” Hannity wrote on Twitter. “I assumed those conversations were confidential, but to be absolutely clear they never involved any matter between me and a third-party.”

“Apparently he works for free,” Kimmel said of Cohen, adding: “What kind of legal advice doesn’t involve a third party, unless maybe Sean Hannity was thinking about suing himself?”

“If this is the biggest witch hunt in history, we’re running out of spots on the broomstick,” Kimmel also said, playing off a “witch hunt” phrase used by both Trump and Hannity to describe the Mueller investigation.

Perhaps it was not a late-night comedian but a CNN host who best captured the mood of the day.

“The judge forced Michael Cohen to admit in court that he has a third client and the third client is Sean Hannity,” Jake Tapper said during his show Monday. “Go home 2018. You’re drunk.”
More from Morning Mix:

Meet the Russian-Owned Firm Creating an Army of Traveling ‘Proxies’

A former senior Russian intelligence official has created an American tech firm that pays people to go places and film things.



In November 2016, just two weeks after the U.S. presidential election, a mysterious ad was posted on Indeed, the popular job website, seeking reporters for a one-day gig: capturing live video of the inauguration of Donald Trump. A few weeks later, a similar notice appeared in Russian on another website.
Political interests blocking inquiry into Daphne Caruana Galizia killing, widower claims

and 
The family of the murdered anti-corruption journalist Daphne Caruana Galiziabelieve that three men awaiting trial for the crime were acting on orders from inside Malta, and have expressed concern that elements within the government may be protecting whoever commissioned the killing.

In his first full interview since his wife’s death in a car bombing six months ago, Peter Caruana Galizia claimed political interests were blocking the police investigation and said he feared the mastermind might never be brought to justice.

“It is clear to us that the three men arraigned so far are simply contractors commissioned by a third party,” he said. “My sons and I are not convinced that our government really wants to establish who sent them, for fear such persons are in fact very close to our government. For this reason we may never know the truth.”

The accused men have all entered not guilty pleas. Police are still setting out their evidence before a magistrate, who will decide whether to dismiss the case or send the men for prosecution before a judge and jury.

The Maltese government says police are leaving no stone unturned. The justice minister is offering a €1m (£870,000) reward for information leading to anyone who may have ordered the car bombing on 16 October last year.

Caruana Galizia had plenty of enemies and critics. She had challenged many who hold power and influence in Malta: mobsters, business people, public officials, lawyers, the governing Labour party, even the current leader of the Nationalist party, with which she had been closely aligned.

The journalist’s widower was speaking from the family home in the village of Bidnija, where he is under 24-hour police protection. The 62-year-old lives alone because the family have been advised by security experts that it is too dangerous for his three sons to stay on the island where they grew up.


 Peter Caruana Galizia stands among tributes to his wife at the scene of her murder. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty, for the Daphne Project

The interview launches a collaboration of 18 news organisations from 15 countries, brought together to continue the investigations Caruana Galizia was undertaking when she died. Led by France’s Forbidden Stories, the Daphne Project includes the Guardian, the New York Times, Süddeutsche Zeitung, Reuters and Le Monde.
Today, the Daphne Project reveals:
  • Exclusive details of the murder inquiry, including how the bombing was planned and executed, and police concerns that the alleged bombers were tipped off in advance of their arrest.
  • The inquiry is now focused on who may have built the bomb, and on any connection between the accused and organised crime.
  • A previously unheard recording of the journalist made six days before she died in which she alleges horrendous, state-sanctioned vilification, and decades of threats against her life. The family’s pet dog had her throat slit in 1995, and there was a serious arson attack on their home in 2006.
  • Interviews with Caruana Galizia’s sons, including Matthew, who was one of the first on the scene just moments after the car bombing.
Over the coming days and weeks, the project will set out the dangers posed to law and order in Europe by alleged political corruption and poor controls on money laundering in Malta.

We will share revelations from a cache of 680,000 files leaked to Caruana Galizia in the final months of her life.

Peter Caruana Galizia agreed to speak because of his concerns that the murder inquiry, which has been assisted by the FBI, appears to have stalled.

The three suspects have been widely reported in Malta’s media as being known to the police.

Caruana Galizia’s family have dismissed the government’s offer of a €1m reward for information about the mastermind as a publicity stunt.

According to two sources with knowledge of the investigation, officers are working on the assumption that the maker of the bomb is still at large, and that whoever ordered the attack may have links to organised crime.

Detectives believe the accused – brothers George and Alfred Degiorgio, and their friend Vincent Muscat – had been tipped off before their arrest. When officers sought them out in the harbour area of Marsa, in a raid filmed on a soldier’s head camera and later broadcast on television, police believe they were prepared. Phones had allegedly been thrown in the water, and George had his partner’s mobile number written on his hand.

The three accused were asked to comment ahead of publication but declined to do so.

Peter Caruana Galizia said: “I don’t see a full commitment to trying to find out who sent the killers.”
His wife’s political blog often attracted more readers than all of Malta’s national press combined and took aim at anyone she believed needed to be held to account.

Caruana Galizia used to joke that someone would have to take out a contract on her life before she fell silent, her husband said. “Subconsciously she knew that this was the only way she was going to be stopped.”

'Journalism was her life': Daphne Caruana Galizia's family speak out - video

The world had gradually closed in on Malta’s best-known journalist in the last four years of her life. Members of the ruling Labour party had encouraged the public to film and photograph her wherever she went, and to upload the pictures to social media. She feared meeting sources in public and rarely left the house.

A libel case from the economy minister had resulted in cash being seized, and she felt unable to use her bank accounts. She was facing 47 libel suits when she died.

Those now seeking damages from her heirs, who have inherited many of the cases, include the prime minister, Joseph Muscat, his chief of staff, Keith Schembri, and two of his ministers.

Muscat said in an email sent by his spokesman: “Allegations of organised threats or harassment against Daphne Caruana Galizia or her family are wholly false.

“My family and I were at the centre of Daphne Caruana Galizia’s politically motivated attacks, but we did not respond to her provocations, fully aware of my role and responsibility as the prime minister of Malta and the leader of the Labour party. I have only resorted to legal means in extreme circumstances.”

Police would be free to “go wherever the evidence takes them”, said Muscat, and the murder was being investigated “vigorously”, with police given whatever resources they needed.

Schembri said Caruana Galizia had made frequent allegations against him which were “often misinformed and defamatory”, and that, where appropriate, he had instructed lawyers “to seek proper correction and redress”.

The journalist had fallen out not only with Labour, but with an array of public officials, business people, magistrates and the new leader of the Nationalist opposition party, which she had previously supported.

“The two parties suddenly had her in their sights and something had to give,” her husband said. “It had become impossible.

“They found it difficult to attack what she said, so instead they attacked her on a personal level. So she became also very recognisable because they had photos of her, screenshots. The more she gave, the more she got. It was a machine against one person really.”

Matthew, the couple’s eldest son, who is a journalist at the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists in Washington, has been advised that he is in danger and should not return to Malta for now. All three sons now live abroad.

“They feel like strangers in their own country,” their father said. “It’s not the Malta that they knew. It’s changed.”
Burma put on UN watchlist for sexual violence

BURMA (Myanmar) has joined the ranks of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq and South Sudan on a list of 19 countries submitted to the United Nations Security Council regarding sexual violence in armed conflict, which said “brutal sexual assault” had been used as a “calculated tool” against Rohingya Muslims.

Its army the Tatmadaw has for the first time been included in the annually released report, which was presented to the Security Council by the UN Secretary General’s Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict on Monday.
Sexual violence had been “integral to their [Burma’s army] strategy, humiliating, terrorising and collectively punishing the Rohingya community”, said the report, which added that it was a “calculated tool to force them to flee their homelands and prevent their return”.


Humanitarian agencies have said more than 671,000 Rohingya refugees have fled Rakhine State into Cox’s Bazar in since Aug 25 in response to so-called “clearing operations” by army. The military and Buddhist vigilantes stand accused of mass killings, rape and arson in Muslim villages.

Echoing the UN Rights Chief who last year said the situation was a “textbook example” of ethnic cleansing, Secretary General’s report referred to “‘ethnic cleansing’ under the guise of clearance operations in northern Rakhine”.

Violence was perpetrated against women including those who were pregnant, it said, because they are viewed as “custodians and propagators of ethnic identity”. It is linked to an “inflammatory narrative” which alleges high fertility rates among Rohingya women represent and “existential threat” to the majority Buddhist population, said the report.

2018-01-24T042905Z_2058865670_RC1E8887E160_RTRMADP_3_MYANMAR-ROHINGYA-REPATRIATION
A Myanmar policeman stands outside of a camp set up by Myanmar’s Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement Minister to prepare for the repatriation of displaced Rohingyas, who fled to Bangladesh, outside Maungdaw in the state of Rakhine, Myanmar January 24, 2018. Source: Reuters

The Special Representative had heard accounts of “rape, gang rape, forced nudity and abduction for the purpose of sexual slavery during military campaigns of slaughter, looting and the razing of homes and villages,” from “almost every woman and girl” during her visit to refugee camps in November, it said.

The UN report reflects the testimonies of Rohingya women whose stories have been widely documented by medical professionals and service providers in Cox’s Bazar, as well as other UN agencies, rights groups and foreign government representatives.


Last November, Human Rights Watch released a 37-page report documenting the horrific recounts of Rohingya women, many who described being victims of gang rape.

“This is the fastest refugee movement since the Rwanda genocide. I am extremely grateful to Bangladesh for opening its borders,” said Director of the Arakan Rohingya National Organisation’s women section Razia Sultana in a statement presented on behalf of civil society to the Security Council.

“However, the international community, especially the Security Council, has failed us,” she said.

image1170x530cropped-1
Razia Sultana, human rights activist and lawyer, addresses the Security Council’s open debate on behalf of the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security. Source: UN Photo/Mark Garten

Razia’s statement alleged that government troops had raped “well over” 300 women and girls across 17 villages in Rakhine – some who were as young as six years old. “This number is likely only a fraction of the actual total number of women raped,” said her statement.

The statement said that many of Burma’s other ethnic groups such as “Karen, Kachin, Chin, Mung, and Shan have also faced decades of entrenched discrimination, rape, and other human rights violations by the military operating with impunity.”

In a visit organised by the UK, Peru and Kuwait, the Security Council will visit camps in Cox’s Bazar and then Burma later this month.


“During this visit, you must meet with women and girl survivors. I could facilitate safe meetings,” said Razia. “You must work with the Bangladesh authorities to stop the trafficking, pressure the Myanmar Government and senior officials to cooperate with the UN Fact Finding mission, and insist on unrestricted humanitarian access across Rakhine State.”

The International Criminal Court (ICC) announced last week it was seeking jurisdiction over Burma in order to investigate and potentially prosecute crimes against humanity in Rakhine.

After her visit to Cox’s Bazar last November, the UN Secretary General’s Special Representative on Sexual Violence’s announced that she would be referring Burma to the ICC.