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

Saturday, May 12, 2018

Aadhaar for Sri Lanka? Women’s labour and the demand for social welfare


logo Friday, 11 May 2018 

International Labour Day on 1 May was honoured in Sri Lanka by several major trade unions and other Left organisations. This was despite the Government’s attempts to ‘shift’ May Day to 7 May, to prevent it from ‘overlapping’ with Vesak Poya. The decision to shift a day that honours labour rights in order to make space for a religious holiday – particularly one which is observed by the majority community – is not a neutral one.

Cat’s Eye felt this was a good moment to reflect on the path we have taken in Sri Lanka: from being a country with State bodies that respected workers’ rights and social welfare provisioning, to a country where the Government thinks it can simply ‘shift’ May Day!

A recent news report revealed that the Government is planning to implement the World Bank funded Social Safety Net Project,1 which is envisioned as a “one-stop shop” platform centralising the fragmented social protection programmes across several ministries. The project will develop a single registry of citizens, enabling each individual beneficiary to be identified using biometric technology. In other words, an Aadhaar for Sri Lanka!2

In India, the Aadhaar scheme was heavily promoted by the Modi Government as a wonder of technology and a solution to many of India’s problems. Simultaneously, resistance has built up against the project by many who work with and are from marginalised communities in India. The strength of this resistance is illustrated by the stay on the Aadhaar scheme that they have managed to achieve in the Supreme Court of India. The Aadhaar scheme is not only a violation of privacy, but has also worsened existing social hierarchies in India. Hardly an enlightened path for us to follow!

Cat’s Eye is of the view that the proposed approach for Sri Lanka, far from being a solution, is dangerous and undemocratic.

As with anywhere else in the world, in Sri Lanka too the burden of weakening social welfare is borne by those most marginalised in society: poor women. Social welfare programmes go hand in hand with women’s labour both in the public and private spheres. The depletion of this social safety will have adverse effects on women’s lives, especially given that many of them are already part of the precarious labour economy.

Decline in political will to safeguard social welfare schemes

Sri Lanka has a long history of social welfare provisions. The country’s development in the post-independence period was centred on a web of State-run free or subsidised public services. It was accompanied by a robust social security system and effective protections for the labour force. They contributed to the achievement of high human development indicators for Sri Lanka, as compared to other countries in the region. In spite of these achievements, the political will to maintain the system has gradually eroded and no investment has been made to make a clear link between social welfare provisions and enhanced living standards.

The liberalisation of the economy in 1977 and subsequent neoliberal policies promoted by the IMF and World Bank contributed to the deterioration of the welfare state. Public services such as free health and education, housing, subsidised transport and utilities, pensions for older persons and welfare programmes such as food stamps have come under attack. The effects of this erosion are further sharpened by the increase in precarious working conditions such as daily wages, small livelihood incomes and short term employment contracts amongst the poor – especially women.

Many changes to social welfare programmes have been justified as ‘restructuring’. The restructuring we are told will address the issues of inefficiency and corruption while making ‘better targets’ for these programmes. For example the replacement of food stamps with targeted cash transfers for the poor under Samurdhi, was to make the delivery more efficient and reduce corruption. However, it has failed to achieve the aim of ensuring nutritious food to families, as the money is often used for debt repayments and other expenses.

The attempt at finding a ‘better target’ has left us with a reduced number of people receiving social welfare. The cumulative result of this strategy is further exclusion of groups of people such as older persons, unemployed, disabled and others facing income insecurities. For women, it has increased their fears of being cut out of social welfare programmes altogether.

The social welfare system has gone hand in hand with hard-won labour provisions, such as pension, provident funds and severance pay. These provisions too have come under scrutiny in recent years with those within and beyond the State referring to them as “too restrictive”. It goes without saying that the “restrictions” that are being referred to, are from the perspective of profit-making employers who want to further exploit labourers. 

All this is needs to be seen in the context where labour laws do not address a large majority of workers in Sri Lanka as they are in the informal sector or are migrant labourers working in other countries. A large number of women are a part of these sectors. The sectors in which poor women work, such as agriculture, fisheries and the service sector are prone to seasonal variations, droughts, floods and employment insecurity. In such a context, fluctuating incomes and debt are constant companions which visit upon many a poor household.

As if this erosion of existing systems is not enough, new mantras that benefit those in power such as ‘public private partnerships’ vis a vis development mechanisms are the life-force of the emergent neoliberal economy with its slew of free trade agreements and foreign direct investments. In this climate, social welfare measures are no longer important for policy-makers and are seen needing to be gradually dismantled.

We are a long way off from universality of protection that would allow people to live in dignity throughout their lifecycle.

Social security

and the family

Even when women are included in social welfare programmes, their life and labour is acknowledged and supported primarily when it fits within the contours of family and marriage.

For example, our public health programmes provide care for women’s bodies primarily when pregnant, and while nursing a child. Restricting a woman’s worth to her role as a mother invisiblises a life-cycle approach to social welfare provisions, which takes into consideration the changing stages and needs of a life-cycle. Similarly, in order to access Samurdhi, women have to show participation in the family structure. This alienates women who are outside what is considered the norm, such as those who do not wish to marry, those who do not wish to bear children or cannot bear children, or those who may not identify as heterosexual.

The primacy of the family, and the woman’s role in it, as the unit that mediates access to services is based on a normative understanding of society. Women’s real lives however spill beyond this structure in all societies, especially in our societies ravaged by war. As a result of moving out of family structures due to domestic violence, war and displacement, disappearance of a husband, divorce, etc., women become less important to the State. Women’s economic vulnerability is increased further by old age, social stigma around unmarried status, and ostracism on any other non-normative life choice that women may make. In all such instances they are less entitled to social welfare. In effect women are being abandoned by State mechanisms in their most vulnerable situations.

Can such a complex set of social, cultural and economic conditions be addressed by single-registry systems using biometric technology? Not only does such technology violate individual privacy, they are far from equipped to understand the ever-changing nature of everyday life of ordinary people. There is no reason to believe that limitations of such technology will not rear their head in Sri Lanka. 

Preserving

and enhancing

social security

It is clear that a vibrant history of social security and welfare our country has been proud of is being eroded. The measures that are brought in as solutions to mediate in these issues are undemocratic.

In order for the State to remain tuned into the pulse of the most marginalised in the country, any measures to address the question of poverty must make space for the voices of the poor. It is through these voices we can paint a holistic picture of current circumstances and possible solutions. Such a process will enhance democracy not just for the poor but for the country as a whole.

We must never lose sight of the direct connection between social welfare measures and the high human development indices of Sri Lanka. This connection must form the basis for a strong political will that maintains social welfare measures.

In order for Government policy to be holistic and relevant it must take into consideration changing conditions of labour, such as the growth of the informal sector and the overwhelming reality of migrant labour,  and the resulting changes in society as a whole. 

It must be recognised that women bear the burden of unequal economic policies within the home, workplace and society in general. Therefore, the voices of women are key to a better understanding of today’s realities and for reimagining a more inclusive, equal and just State policy and society.

The Cat’s Eye gaze will observe the solutions being suggested by State and non-State actors, and weigh their equity and fairness from the perspective of marginalised sections of society, particularly of poor women.
(The Cat’s Eye column is written by an independent collective of feminists, offering an alternative feminist gaze on current affairs in Sri Lanka and beyond.)
Footnotes

1 Sunday Times. Finance Ministry to Review Social Protection Programmes. 2018, 22nd April.

2 ‘Aadhaar’ is the digital social security programme implemented in India, under the current Modi government; known as the ‘world’s largest biometric ID system’

Lanka, only country with least concern for theatre safety - Consultant Surgeon

Sri Lanka is the only country where Surgical Operation Theatres are functioning without adhering to the terms and conditions on Surgical Operation Theatre Safety recommended by the World Health Organization(WHO), Consultant Surgeon of the Galle Karapitiya Teaching Hospital Dr. Rajitha Abewickrama told the Daily News.
Dr. Abeywickrama had to undergo a one and half-hour operation for a compound fracture on his big toe as the operation theatre table fell on his foot while he was performing a large intestine operation on a female patient.
Dr. Abeywickrama commenting on the incident said that he was the on-call doctor at the Karapitiya Teaching Hospital Emergency Trauma Unit attached to the University Surgical Unit and on Wednesday (9) while he was engaged in an operation at the surgical operation theatre, the table suddenly crashed crushing his toe bone in the process.
“I believe, this is supposedly the first ever such casualty reported in the world’s health history so far,”he said.
“I searched over the Internet and found that no such incident had occurred in which a medical staffer faced an accident of this nature in an operation theatre during a surgical operation process,” Dr. Abeywickrama said.
“Not only at the Karapitiya Hospital, but at all other health institutions throughout Sri Lanka, theatre safety is in a very poor condition. The World Health Organization has introduced a scientific methodology for surgical operation theatre safety. However, proper measures for theatre safety is properly maintained in developed country only,” he added.
“Most medical staff in operation theatres in the country are not properly trained in operating surgery instruments and appliances. Some hospital employees attached to theatres do not know how to handle surgical equipment properly. Many of the implements, specifically theatre tables in operation theatres are electric or hydraulic operated. Our staff do not know how to manipulate such apparatus. As such the authorities should pay special attention to theatre safety,” he stressed
Explaining the incident, Dr.Abeywickrama said that on Wednesday he had to perform three planned operations at the Emergency Trauma Unit Theatre.
“I was performing the last operation when suddenly the operating table crashed with the patient on to my big toe. The table is very heavy. However, I managed to extract my big toe which was badly injured. The terminal phalanx was completely crushed. It was during the last stage of the operation and my assistant medical staff had to finish the operation. No obstruction was caused to the operation on the patient. The patient is now in stable condition,” Dr. Abeywickrama said.
Specialist Plastic Surgeon Satish Wijemanna performed plastic surgery on my injured toe. I am now staying at the Consultant’s Lounge. However, I have managed to conduct my usual clinics.
Moreover, the hospital sources revealed that the hospital authorities had not paid serious attention to the incident and they are still to initiate a preliminary inquiry into the accident.
Hospital Director Jayampathi Senanayake told the media that this incident was a minor occurrence. 

This dharmadvipa, the land of crime without punishment



article_image

Usvatte-aratchi- 

The past twelve months and more have been momentous to those who, perhaps guileless, care about law and order, one part of which is that those who commit crimes, after due process in courts, must be punished as prescribed in the law. There was Xi Jinping in China who punished severely those found guilty of offences in the use of public funds. They were given due process, as prescribed in the laws of that country, though those laws are considered unsatisfactory by many. It is also alleged that Xi used these mechanisms to get rid of his powerful rivals.

More recently, courts in India punished a powerful former minister in Uttar Pradesh, Lalu Prasad Yadav for corrupt practices. He was sent to prison, for 12 years.Three weeks back, Nawaz Sharif, the powerful former Prime Minster of Pakistan from the rich Sindh province, was banished from standing for election to political office for the rest of his life. His crime had to do with the accumulation of wealth for which there was no reasonable explanation. The Prime Minister of Malaysia has been charged with the offence of money laundering. A former President of the Republic of Korea was found guilty according to law and duly punished. In Thailand, a former Prime Minister is before courts accused of several misdeeds, including abuse of public property.

Further away, Ignacio Lula da Silva, former two-term President of Brazil, was found guilty according to law and punished. There are cases against powerful politicians in several countries in Central and Latin America, including Peru. In Africa a highly respected leader of the struggle against apartheid in South Africa , Jacob Zuma resigned from the post of President of the Republic, under pressure from the Legislature. So did Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe. In US, there are two investigations into the conduct of President Trump in office: one, by the Special Counsel Robert Mueller III and the second initiated by the Department of Justice after the dismissal of James Comeyfrom the office of Director of FBI.

A columnist in The Economist of April14, 2018 commented on the election of Trump as President: ‘It reflects the still-dumbfounding reality that one of the world’s oldest democracies elected a fully formed rascal to its highest office. Mr. Trump did not even try to hide his designs. He promised to run the country as he ran his family businesses, which would logically mean nepotistically, autocratically, with great regard for his personal interests and little for the rules. And so he has.’ Those features of a President’s conduct sound entirely familiar to us. For those in Sri Lanka planning to vote in 2019 and 2020, let them be forewarned that history shall not record that they elected a ‘fully formed rascal’ for high office in the oldest democracy in Asia. Rascals are lining up in cleverly disguising garb and sycophants are willing and ready with hosannas to them.

Amidst this whole plethora of instances of the supremacy of the law, in this thrice blessed dharmadvipa, it is adharma that reigns. Except in one recent instance, which has netted a high level bureaucrat and a private sector wealth owner, politicians who held the highest level positions and committed depraving crimes have been protected from punishment. Dharmadvipa indeed! It is not uncommon for criminals carrying machine guns, to travel to commit murder in luxury cars with the statement dhammo have rakkhati dhammachari (Those that live by the dhamma are protected by the dhamma.) pasted prominently on their cars. It helps to have a second string to one’s bow!

It is not uncommon in Sri Lanka for someone charged with criminal offenses to receive ‘blessings’ from high ranking bhikkhu. (This whole idea of blessing (ashirvada) by persons who are not priests is bogus and should be examined for legitimacy).We expect even trees to bless us! In an exceptional display, in 2017, one man lost his job as minister and the Prime Minister himself lost his much coveted Teflon cover against allegations of financial impropriety. Another implicated in the case is a fugitive from justice. This whole rigmarole of a Presidential Commission and Parliamentary Select Committees could have become wholly superfluous in 2015 itself, had the Supreme Court permitted a petition presented to it by three citizens to proceed.

In contrast with the experience in the lands of infidels, several dozen criminals who ruled the country previously strut on political platforms with heads held high for any cruising knight to lop it off, if he would dare. Over a long infernal ‘night of knives’, all tall and handsome knights turned into midgets and ugly knaves. We saw one man who imagined himself to be of knightly material, pull only the scabbard of Excalibur when he tried to pull it out from the rock. We have not seen either the pretentious knight or the scabbard ever since.

In place of the supremacy of the law, fear, power and corruption rules the behaviour of all in public life. You do not, out of fear for your life, complain to the police of a crime committed against you by anyone who exercises some power. We all were witness to the ignominy of a Principal of a school falling at the feet of a mostly illiterate Chief Minister of a Province and he is now the Minister of Education in that Province. His appointment to that position tells a lot about leadership in this society. With this sort of leadership there is reason why you would not bear witness to a crime. Your child must go to school, you and your spouse must venture out to work and your house must be left unguarded to the wrath of ruthless criminals who may be politicians or work for hire by powerful people, mostly politicians. It was reported today (April 20) that nobody appeared in court to identify a gang of hoodlums that assaulted a number of foreign young people in a bar in Mirissa. Those young people never may have justice meted out to them in this dharmadvipa because nobody would come out to identify the criminals. The police would often present a report to the magistrate with sufficient loopholes for the accused to wriggle out, if they paid off the officer adequately.

Files of powerful people accused of high crimes including murder are lost in the bureaucracy and these cases would never see light of day. Forensic evidence in the care of highly paid professionals are mislaid or lost to ensure that those powerful people charged with the commitment of murder will not be prosecuted. A man who was bold enough to appeal to courts that he was a prisoner in Welikada jail and was witness to the crimes of murdering 27 prisoners on November 9-11, 2012, who therefore were wards of government, has not had his appeal been promptly dealt with because the accused are too hot to handle.

One man is repeatedly prevented from being arrested by the police while another is incarcerated because his passport is with another court and cannot be brought to a particular court right away. Is inequity written into the rules of conduct of our courts? Instances pile upon one over the other of the planned denial of justice. In these circumstances, it was a miracle that the ‘bonds scam’ case was proceeded with such alacrity, for which all citizens must stand grateful. Lord Bingham’s (Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales) statement, in 2010, ‘The judges are not, of course, the only guardians of the rule of law, perhaps not even the most important’, applies in our circumstance with vehemence.

According to an official announcement, if I have got it right, there are 750,000 cases pending in courts. This figure does not seem unlikely in light of numbers put out by Shelani de Silva of Law and Society Trust that out of 7,802 rape and other grave sexual offences that came up for appeal between 2012 and 2016, no more than 156 were heard to closure, 7.646, a little more than one percent, accumulating in that total of 750,000. There are less than 200 judges on roll. If we take 200 for rough and easy calculation, each judge will have to decide, on average, 3,750 cases to simply work off the backlog. If each judge worked 50 weeks a year and took one week, on average, to decide on each case, each judge would need to work 75 years to clear this backlog. That is two times the working life of a normal judge, engaging all judges in the system. Now recall that some cases may go through the entire cycle of appeals. And soon you realize that the whole exercise is absurd in its practicality. One needs to think up a radically different but effective solution. Yet the Bar Association of Sri Lanka objects to the creation of more courts to hear some cases!

It takes 17 years, on average, to bring a case to closure after all appeals. The first appeal takes seven years to be heard. Recently, a High Court judge released from imprisonment a pair of senior bureaucrats when their counsel pleaded that their incarceration was for seven years and that their appeal to higher courts would take more time than that to be heard and that therefore it would be unjust to keep them in prison until after their appeals were heard to closure. Justice, indeed. The less sophisticated and the less moneyed prisoners, though in the same circumstances, would languish in jail simply because they lacked information and are poorer. What kind of justice is that?

Most people involved in the administration of justice in our country seem extra enthusiastic about obstructing justice in the present circumstances. If those alleged to have committed crimes were to regain control of government, then all pending judicial proceedings against them would cease. Those public servants whose reluctant responsibility it is to proceed now to take those accused to courts, find it in their interest to delay proceedings one way or another. They form a ‘deep government’ within the government and has its own agenda and priorities. (‘Deep state’ is a misnomer.) Doing so, they would save themselves a lot of trouble, should government change. Politicians now in government who may have things to hide have an interest in being kind to those now accused should there be a change of tables. Absent a system of inquiring magistrates as in statute law countries, unless the senior judiciary becomes aggressive as in India now, adharma or lawlessness will rule this country.

The foregoing appreciation of the situation on my part, makes unacceptable what university teachers of law and the Bar Association claim that we have a system of judicial administration adequate to meet the challenges before it. Numbers prove otherwise. Our institutions cannot withstand abuse of power and our organizations have no strength to stand against an onslaught by interested parties. President Trump would much like to dismiss the Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller III and disrupt the inquiry into his conduct by his own Department of Justice. Congress would not let him do either. Those who argue for more power to an Elected President do not realize the disaster that he/she could pose to the wellbeing of ordinary citizens. That the 19th Amendment to the Constitution removed the power of the President to dismiss Parliament is an object lesson in the value of separation of powers. I would go further and urge that Parliament run for a term specified in the constitution leaving no one with power to end its life. The law will specify when government holds elections to elect a new Parliament or a President. So must the period of office of the President of the Republic be fixed by law. Sumanadasas and Peirises will have to seek other gullible victims. Such provisions in the Constitution will end the shenanigans that we have seen under the 1978 Constitution.

There are institutions besides laws that govern peoples’ lives. Buddhists use two Pali words hiri and ottappa and in Sinhala hiri and otap. Hiri is remorse or guilt that one feels for having done something wrong. It is the pain you have when you face the mirror in the morning, after the night when you raped a helpless young woman. Ottappa is the shame that you have in facing others after having done something wrong. It is the pain you feel when your long standing friend crosses over to the other side of the street, the moment he notices you on the same side of the road as he. We seem to have lost all sense of hiri otap.

Let me quote for you a quatrain which I enjoy much:

‘Venurnanali karkatakascha rambha

Vinashakale phalmud bhavanthi,

Evang naranang mativi prakaram

Vinashakale viparita budhih.’

‘As in calamitous death throes, the bamboo, the crab and the banana plant bloom and bear fruit, so do men in their own destruction lose their mind.’

Let the old order die. Their day and destruction are done. The young will live and so their progeny and theirs. Let the young wrest control of organizations and re-fashion institutions to suit their minds, always aware that they threw away the old order because it was short sighted, ignorant, selfish, ugly and uncivilized.

21 illegal constructions along Mirissa Beach demolished

2018-05-11
Twenty one illegal constructions along the Mirissa Beach were demolished today by the Coast Conservation Department (CCD). Pix by Krishan Jeewaka Jayaruk




Israel closes Gaza goods crossing after Friday protests


The crossing was damaged on Friday during a weekly Palestinian protest

Palestinian protests during the 'Great March of Return' on the Gaza-Isreal border (AFP)

 
Saturday 12 May 2018

The only goods crossing between Gaza and Israel was closed until further notice on Saturday after it was damaged during a weekly protest by Palestinians.
Dozens of demonstrators broke into the Palestinian side of the Kerem Shalom terminal on Friday, setting a pipeline that delivers gas from Israel and a goods conveyor belt alight.
The incursion took place during the "Great March of Return" protest which Palestinians have organised every Friday for six-weeks on Gaza's border with Israel.
The Israeli side of the crossing, several hundred metres away, was not breached.
The protests have regularly witnessed violence and more than 40 Palestinians have been killed, many by live fire from the Israeli side.
"The crossing will remain closed until the damage caused by the riots are repaired and will reopen in accordance with a situation assessment," the Israeli military said, adding that in the meantime it will be opened for humanitarian cases only.
It accused the protesters of being "under the auspices of Hamas," the group that runs the Gaza strip, without providing evidence.
It was unclear to some Gaza residents why the demonstrators chose to attack the terminal.
"I cannot find one good reason for what happened, what is the wisdom behind this?" said one gas station owner, who asked not to be identified.
"Some petrol stations have storage for maybe a day or two, so the crisis will begin by Monday or Tuesday should the crossing remained closed," he said.
The Palestinian National Committee said it was "surprised by the non-deliberate and unfortunate incident that damaged property" at Kerem Shalom and called on Palestinians to preserve the crossings.
On Saturday evening the Israeli military struck Gaza, Haaretz reported. According to Palestinian reports, the Israel Air Force fired seven missiles toward an agricultural area east of the city of Beit Hanoun. No casualties were reported. The army later said the strike targeted a tunnel.

'Foreboding Friday'

On Friday, thousand of Palestinians gathered along the Israel-Gaza frontier. Reports emerged that Israeli forces were heavily firing tear gas at the crowds in some areas, while one protester was killed and at least five protesters were shot with live bullets east of Gaza City.
On Saturday, the Gaza Ministry of Health said Jamal Abdel Rahman Afaneh, 15, died from wounds sustained during Friday's protest.
The protesters have been calling for the right of return for Palestinian refugees forced from their homes in present-day Israel during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
Friday's demonstration was dubbed "Preparedness and Foreboding Friday," in anticipation of the final protest of the march early next week.
Read more ►
The march was initially set to end on 15 May, the 70th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba (Catastrophe), in which more than 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly displaced by Israeli forces.
However, the final demonstration has been scheduled for Monday 14 May due to the imminent beginning of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Kerem Shalom is the only crossing open to transport goods into and out of Gaza, including fuel and food. A separate people crossing in northern Gaza remains open.
Separately Egypt opened its border crossing with Gaza, the only one not with Israel, for four days Saturday.
More than 40 Palestinians have been killed during the six weeks of protest. Many have been shot and killed by Israeli snipers. Israel says it has acted to defend its border and has accused the protests of being directed by Hamas.
Tens of thousands of Gazans are expected at tented border encampments in the coming days to protest against the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem.

Israel amassing its forces ahead of Nakba protests

Israeli soldiers are seen during Great March of Return protests east of Gaza City on 11 May.Mohammed ZaanounActiveStills

Maureen Clare Murphy- 11 May 2018
Israeli forces killed a Palestinian protester and injured hundreds more during the seventh consecutive Friday of the Great March of Return demonstrations along Gaza’s eastern perimeter.
Jaber Salem Abu Mustafa, 38, died after he was shot in the chest east of Khan Younis. Forty-one Palestinians have been fatally injured during the protests that were launched on 30 March.
During that same period, Israeli forces killed 13 additional Palestinians in Gaza who were not participating in the protests when they were fatally wounded.
Nearly 200 people were injured by live fire on Friday. Ten persons were said to be critically wounded.
Three medics and six journalists were also reported injured.
Reporter Motasem Ahmed Dalloul was hit by live fire to the stomach, the Committee to Protect Journalists reported.
Mass protests are expected to continue next week with the opening of the US embassy of Jerusalem on 14 May, the 70th anniversary of the declaration of the state of Israel on Palestinian lands.
The Israeli military has “begun reinforcing battalions exponentially in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank” in the lead-up to what it says will be protests “far more violent and extensive than anything seen thus far,” the Israeli daily Haaretz reported.
“According to assessments, 100,000 protesters are expected in 17 flashpoints along the Gaza [boundary], compared to the five flashpoints during last Friday’s protest,” the paper stated on Friday.
Israeli forces fired tear gas towards the protest area where Hamas leader Ismail Haniya is - Palestinian mediahttps://twitter.com/gazaaln/status/994984445454282757?s=19 
Israeli army official briefed journalists & said the army expects "more violent protests" against the US embassy opening in Jerusalem on Monday - in Gaza & the West Bank.
Translation: Israeli army is expected to use more violence during the protests Monday
The leadership of the Gaza protests has called for a Million Person March of Return next week.
Yahya Sinwar, the head of Hamas in Gaza, gave his blessing for the breaching of the Israeli boundary fence by thousands on Monday and Tuesday, when Palestinians will mark Nakba Day, the annual commemoration of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.
Two-thirds of Gaza’s population of two million are refugees from the lands on which the state of Israel was declared in 1948. Israel has long prevented Palestinian refugees from returning to their lands and homes because they are not Jewish.
A graphic published by Visualizing Palestine shows the villages of origin of refugees killed during the Great March of Return protests:
40 Palestinians have been killed by Israel during the demonstrations. This visual highlights their villages of origin. http://bit.ly/vp-gazareturnmarch 
Three Palestinian human rights groups are calling on diplomats and United Nations officials to boycott the opening of the Jerusalem embassy.
The relocation of the embassy to Jerusalem “only entrenches Israel’s longstanding impunity for its widespread and systematic violations against Palestinians,” the rights groups Al-Mezan, Adalah and Al-Haq stated in an open letter to the UN ecretary-general and High Commissioner for Human Rights this week.
“The longest unresolved question to fall under the responsibility of the UN, Palestine has become a litmus test for the efficacy of the international system as a whole and the willingness of the international community to abide by the rule of law and act in the face of widespread and systematic violations of international human rights and humanitarian law,” the groups add.
Fewer than half of the foreign diplomats invited to a reception on Sunday marking the move of the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem have accepted, according to Israeli media reports. The event will reportedly be attended by Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner, as well as the US treasury secretary and elected American officials.
Protests broke out across the West Bank and Gaza Strip after Donald Trump declared US recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel on 6 December, breaking with decades of US policy.
That month the United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution reaffirming the illegality of Israel’s annexation of Jerusalem following its capture in the 1967 War and called on states to refrain from establishing diplomatic missions in the city.
More than a dozen Palestinian human rights groups condemned the upcoming embassy move on Friday, stating that “By recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, the US is deliberately denying the existing situation of occupation and the applicability of international humanitarian and human rights law.”
The Palestinian Human Rights Organizations Council called on the Palestinian Authority to “immediately cease cooperating with the US as an arbiter for peace” and for states to halt aid to Israel and impose sanctions until it “ends its annexation and unlawful prolonged occupation of the Palestinian territory, ceases all breaches of international law, and ensures justice and accountability.”
Israel’s shooting of unarmed protesters in Gaza was meanwhile raised at the 95th session of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination that convened over the past two and a half weeks.
In a statement issued under its early warning and urgent action procedures, intended to prevent and respond to violations of the International Convention Against All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the body expressed its grave concern that many protesters were killed or injured when they posed no imminent threat.
The body called for “an immediate end to the disproportionate use of force against Palestinian demonstrators,” lifting the blockade on Gaza and the implementation of appropriate measures “to combat the proliferation of racist acts and manifestations of racist hate speech that particularly target Palestinians in the territories under [Israel’s] effective control.”

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Palestinian Refugees Suffer Setback in Lebanon’s Parliamentary Election


Shatila Camp, Beirut

 MAY 11, 2018

Palestinian refugees in Lebanon have no right to vote and that has never been a significant issue with them. As refugees they are not citizens of Lebanon and have never sought naturalization. Rather, their focus continues to be on acquiring at least some elementary civil rights pending full return to their own country, Palestine.

Admittedly, the hostility toward all refugees in Lebanon these days predictably would shrink the pro-Palestinian Parliamentary election lobbying results of the Beirut-Washington, DC Palestine Civil Rights Campaign (PCRC) among others. Still, it had been hoped that the make-up of the new 128 seat Parliament, would increase the chances that Lebanon’s Parliament would grant Palestinian refugees, after 70 years since their forced Exodus from Palestine the most basic civil rights to work and to own a home. These rights are granted to every refugee world-wide except to Palestinians in sectarianized Lebanon.

The Palestine Civil Rights Campaign (PCRC) has for nearly a dozen years been working to convince Lebanon’s Parliament to take 90 minutes of its time to achieve the following humanitarian initiatives and for candidates seeking a seat in Parliament to include in their electoral platform a commitment to:
* Amend legislation that restricts the ability of Palestinian refugees to own property, specifically Presidential Decree 11614 of 4 January 1969, as modified by law 296 of April 3, 2001. This anti-Palestinian decree prohibits people who do “not carry a citizenship issued by a recognized state” from securing legal title to real estate in Lebanon. Since most Palestinians are stateless, the decree’s effect is to deny them the right to have legal title to a home outside the squalid camps.

* Lift any remaining restrictions on the entry of building and maintenance materials and equipment into Palestinian refugee camps.

* Remove restrictions on employment. Palestinian refugees, by international humanitarian law are to be given the same access to the labor market as other refugees and Lebanese nationals. With respect to employment, the Lebanese Labor Law of 1962 treats Palestinian refugees like other non-Lebanese and requires them to have a work permit. Rules for issuing work permits are subject to the principle of reciprocity, according to which Lebanon grants the right to work only to nationals of other states whose countries grant Lebanese citizens the right to work. Again, since Palestine is not yet recognized as a state, Palestinians are excluded from many jobs.

So what happened with last weekend’s voting to undercut Palestinian hopes in Lebanon’s 12 camps and what became of all that campaign rhetoric about human rights and “the Resistance will liberate Palestine beginning in Lebanon’s camps?”

To gain the possibility of some civil rights noted above, pro-Palestinian lawmakers in Lebanon (regrettably a dying breed nowadays) needed support from a combined simple majority of half plus-one of the 128 MP seats in Parliament, i.e. 65 members.

Factors relevant to the final vote results included the following:

Low voter turnout

Just 49.2 percent of Lebanon’s 3.6 million eligible voters decided to bother to vote as opposed, down from 54 percent in 2009. The most common explanation this observer heard was that standing in line for two hours or more to vote in an “election” that would very likely bring zero change was a waste of time. It has been estimated that no fewer than 35 percent of the votes cast in Lebanon’s previous elections were bought and paid for and this year’s unproven estimate is closer to 50%. The going price was $ 200 per vote. It is not clear to this observer how some citizens were able to sell several votes but its true that many Lebanese have a reputation for being good at “business”.

Confusing new election law

The low voter turnout can also be explained by the confusing and complicated new electoral law that required citizens to vote for whole party lists at a time of new electoral combinations. This meant, for example, that in some districts Sunnis were forced to vote for their traditional rivals such as the Michel Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) if they wanted the Sunni candidate Saad Hariri to serve again as Prime Minister. This was because Hariri’s Future Movement was linked with Aoun’s FPM on the ballot.

Consequently, a relatively strong supporter of Palestinians in Lebanon, Hariri’s party suffered the election’s biggest blow, dropping around a third of its seats or from 33 to 21. Hezbollah-backed Sunnis did much better, mainly in Beirut, Tripoli, and Sidon, securing ten of the twenty-seven Sunni-allocated seats. The results suggest that Lebanon’s pro-Palestinian Sunni community is also deeply fractured and non-focused due in significant measure to perceived current feeble leadership.

A just-released (5/10/2018) breakdown by the Interior Ministry of preferential votes gained by each winning candidate, has exposed many discrepancies that have parties already insisting that there must be reform of the new electoral law and questioning the election results.

Parties that have long opposed to granting Palestinians the right to work did well at the polls

The Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) which Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun headed for years and which is currently politically partnered with Hezbollah, expanded its voting bloc from 21 to 29 members. Michel Aoun is rabidly anti-Palestinian, and the FPM will not support any civil rights for Palestinians in Lebanon until there is a progressive change in leadership.

The Shia AMAL Movement, Hezbollah’s Shiite ally, picked up several seats and they also oppose civil rights for Palestinians in Lebanon despite international humanitarian law precepts requiring them.

The anti-Palestinian party that gained the most Parliamentary seats than in the 2009 election is Samir Geagea’s Christian party Lebanese Forces (LF) which increased its share from eight to fifteen Parliamentary seats. This is another setback for Palestinians given Geagea’s long and violent anti-Palestinian history and the role of the Lebanese Forces during the 1982 Sabra-Shatila Massacre and orchestrating other anti-Palestinian violence before and since. Geagea is now positioned to run for President of Lebanon and shares the hostility toward Palestinians in Lebanon of Lebanon’s current President, Michel Aoun of the FPM.

Another winner during the May 6th election is Hezbollah. While it won the same number of seats as in 2009 when it secured 13, today with its network of alliances, it arguably can secure a majority in parliament, exercising a veto power over Parliamentary decisions, and “legalizing” its weapons arsenal, one of its main goals. An important reason for Hezbollah and its ally’s election victory was their more effective use of sectarian appeals. Although many Shia have criticized Hezbollah’s involvement in Syria, they have become less vocal recently partly one imagines because of their perceived success of the pro-Assad coalition’s recent string of victories in Syria, which resulted in fewer dead Lebanese Shia, and that Hezbollah is still viewed as the protector of the Shia.

Iran and Hezbollah, since before they entered the sectarian war in Syria were making it plain that they will not support elementary civil rights to work or to home ownership for the camp refugees. This, despite incessantly playing a false Palestinian “Resistance” card to gain support from those who do believe in the case for Palestinian civil rights.

The pro-Palestinian Druze Progressive Socialist Party (PSP), headed by Walid Jumblatt, did manage to gain one additional seat in recent election. But unfortunately, it will help very little to gain Palestinians some civil rights. The 5/6/2018 Lebanese electoral result is a serious setback for Palestinians seeking civil rights in Lebanon.

A pro-Palestinian grassroots movement of activists, journalists and other political newcomers called “Kollouna Watani (“We are all Patriots”) managed to win a seat in Parliament and claim that any presence in parliament was a landmark victory for its campaign against patronage in an era when politics is run as a family business. Some see this as a significant political breakthrough as the number of activists in Lebanon has been dramatically rising in several areas.

In addition to the further blow to Palestinians in Lebanon gaining elementary civil rights from this year’s election, not much will change here politically. Lebanon’s fractured society has not been altered. It remains a divided, sectarian country where clientelism reigns and creates the political culture that has kept it from becoming a democracy in the past, currently and quite likely for the foreseeable future.

Carlos Eddé | Head of Lebanon’s National Bloc Party recently explained about Lebanon, “While it has the appearance of a democracy, it is in fact a plutocratic oligarchy. Electoral lists have no political cohesion or logic and election laws are always designed to protect the ruling class. The present one has an even more hideous characteristic in that it has transformed the electoral campaign outside areas controlled by Hezbollah into a general saloon brawl among foes and allies as well.”

Despite the recent election results, Palestinians in Lebanon will continue their struggle to achieve the elementary civil rights to work and to own a home. Their prospects will increase if more of their international supporters active on myriad internet blogs will focus on their plight in Lebanon and hopefully many will come to Lebanon to help organize an effective grassroots civil rights campaign.
Lebanese politicians can be persuaded to apply international humanitarian law principles, rules and standards and grant Palestinian refugees the elementary civil rights to work and to own a home. They must be approached personally with the facts from many UN and other studies demonstrating how granting these rights will grow Lebanon’s economy and help unify the country.

There is much political work to be done here in Lebanon’s 12 refugee camps but Lebanon’s Palestinians are organizing to do it.
 
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Franklin Lamb volunteers with the Lebanon, France, and USA based Meals for Syrian Refugee Children Lebanon (MSRCL) which seeks to provide hot nutritional meals to Syrian and other refugee children in Lebanon. http://mealsforsyrianrefugeechildrenlebanon.com. He is reachable c/o fplamb@gmail.com.