Peace for the World

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

Sunday, July 1, 2018

For Sri Lanka, More and Better Jobs Are Critical to Reach Upper-Middle Income Status

Despite natural disasters, Sri Lanka is reaping the benefits of improved revenue collection and managed expenditures and, has thus recorded a primary fiscal surplus for the first time in decades.

However, the current domestic political environment has slowed reforms and complicated the stable medium-term outlook.

To create more and better jobs, Sri Lanka needs to address low female labour force participation and youth unemployment.

( June 29, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) In 2017, for the first time in decades, Sri Lanka’s fiscal revenue exceeded expenditures excluding interest payments, leading to a primary fiscal surplus.
However, despite this and other improvements in macroeconomic performance, the island nation remains vulnerable.
Natural disasters continue to take their toll on the GDP, while the pace of urgent fiscal reforms has lagged in a challenging political environment, says the World Bank Sri Lanka’s new Development Update (SLDU).
Released twice a year, the report analyses the country’s performance over the last six months and highlights crucial developments against the global context.
The latest edition of the SLDU notes that economic growth slowed down to a 16-year low in 2017 due mainly to adverse weather conditions.
This had a knock-on effect, as inflationary pressures remained high due to drought, VAT changes, and demand pressures. The external trade balance weakened, and agriculture and related sectors were hit hard by successive floods and droughts, resulting in growth decelerating to 3.3 percent.
On the balance, official reserves hit a record high in April 2018 thanks to capital inflows. Growth is expected to rebound in 2018 from a low base and continue to be around 4.3 percent in the medium term, driven by private consumption and investment. The VAT reforms were among several measures that led to improved revenue collection. Implementation of the Inland Revenue Act — which came into effect in April 2018 — is expected to structurally increase tax revenue.
“Sri Lanka’s march towards Upper-Middle-Income status and more and better jobs hinges on the economy’s competitiveness and its ability to pursue a private investment-tradable sector-led growth model,” says Ralph Van Doorn, the World Bank’s Senior Economist for Sri Lanka and the Maldives.
Highlighting the challenges posed by domestic political considerations and institutional constraints on implementing policies, Van Doorn added, “A strong political will and support of the bureaucracy could help advance the reform agenda.”

Sri Lanka’s outlook remains stable but is conditional on reforms

To transition into Upper-Middle-Income status, Sri Lanka will have to embrace a new growth model and improve its economy’s competitiveness.
With that in mind, the government has begun to implement the extensive and ambitious reforms outlined in Vision 2025, notably phasing out of para-tariffs, simplifying and speeding up procedures for investment, trade and setting up a business.
Aimed at enhancing competitiveness, improving governance and streamlining public financial management, the reforms are expected to bring in long-term benefits.
However, a challenging domestic political environment has already taken a toll, slowing down some reforms and complicating the stable medium-term outlook. An impending election cycle only elevates this risk.
Delays in improving tax administration are among the risks Sri Lanka must confront on the fiscal front. As successive instances of extreme weather have demonstrated, natural disasters could have an adverse impact on growth, the fiscal budget, the external sector and poverty reduction.
Further, public spending is only expected to increase as the country’s demographic transition advances, putting pressure on pension and healthcare systems.
To stay on track, Sri Lanka will have to invest in continued fiscal consolidation – by further increasing revenue and creating fiscal space for growth-supporting public investment.

High fiscal risks from public and state-owned enterprises

Even as the central government’s debt to GDP ratio declined to 77.6 percent, it remains high compared to other middle-income countries and is subject to risks. Implementing the new Active Liability Management Act is critical to deal with the risks of refinancing the Eurobonds maturing between 2019 and 2022.
Sri Lanka’s sizeable state-owned enterprise (SOE) sector is struggling, with SOE debt growing mainly due to the absence of cost reflective pricing of electricity and weak operational performance.Recent introduction of cost reflective pricing for fuel is an important measure to reduce fiscal risks.
An integrated risk management approach is needed to manage debt and contingent liabilities linked to SOEs and the impact of natural disasters. Implementing without further delay the cost-reflective energy pricing for electricity, and establishing a unified debt management office are critical.
In a context of high domestic interest rates, the gradual tightening of global financial conditions and an expected gradual depreciation of the exchange rate, increased fiscal discipline will prove critical. If seen through, continued fiscal consolidation will continue to reduce the debt burden in the medium term.

More and better jobs are critical to reach upper-middle income country status

During the last decade, the employment rate in Sri Lanka decreased on average by 0.5 percent every year. Low female labor force participation and increasing unemployment among youth have contributed to Sri Lanka’s low employment rate. As the country prepares to embrace a new private investment-tradable sector-led growth model, a large, skilled labor force will be vital to driving growth and addressing the challenges presented by the demographic transition to an aging population.
Improving the supply of jobs, through attracting more foreign direct investments (FDI) to plug into global and regional value chains, improving the environment for trade, business, innovation and entrepreneurship are essential.
Equally important is addressing the supply of labor, by encouraging female labor force participation and equipping students with the relevant skills required in an aspiring Upper Middle-Income economy.
Regional disparities are yet to be addressed. The consequences of the conflict are still visible in the labor outcomes in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, with employment rates in these provinces still below the national average – 44 and 42 percent in the Northern and Eastern Provinces as compared to employment rates of 50 and 54 percent in the Western Province and other provinces, respectively. It is clear that post-conflict provinces need to create the most jobs.
Across the board, reforms could grow the Sri Lankan workforce as the country aims to create more and better jobs through a knowledge-based, highly competitive, social market economy focused on inclusion.

Inaugural meeting of the all party parliamentary group (APPG) for COSMOS (UK) to highlight matters affecting Sri Lankan Muslims


LEN logo(Lanka e News -30.June.2018, 7.00PM) Council of Sri Lankan Muslim Organizations (COSMOS) UK, the umbrella organization for twenty six Sri Lankan Muslim Organizations based in UK is pleased to announce the historic landmark of the inauguration of  the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Council of Sri Lankan Muslim Organisations (COSMOS) UK on Thursday 28th June 2018 at Committee Room 17 of the House of Commons, London. The meeting was initiated and chaired by Hon. Bob Blackman, The MP for Harrow East, and attended by a cross section of MPs and House of Lords , including The Rt. Hon. The Lord Naseby , Hon. Tan Singh Dhesi MP for Slough  and Liz Mc Inness MP, Shadow Minister for Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs ,  Sri Lankan born The Mayor Cllr.  Kareema Marikar of London Borough of Harrow was also present at this meeting. 
The purpose of this APPG was ''To support, and take up issues raised by COSMOS, relating to Sri Lankan Muslim issues, towards protecting their rights, and promoting peaceful co-existence, in the context of the goodwill prevailing between the two countries, thereby, ushering in, a strong relationship between the two peoples of both counties United Kingdom and Sri Lanka’. Chair of COSMOS UK Azahim Mohammed thanked Mr. Blackman for the initiative taken and support provided in this regard. COSMOS Team made representations to the MPs regarding the background to the challenges faced by the Muslims of Sri Lanka and stressed the need to build upon this historic step, in order to help towards promoting the peaceful co-existence in Sri Lanka and also use the good offices of the UK government to call upon the Sri Lankan government to protect minority rights and the rights of Muslims to live as equal citizens, as per constitutional and international obligations. 
The Parliamentarians present pledged to work towards these objectives, by strengthening the group and also regularly take such issues up with the relevant authorities at the appropriate times through cross party consensual approach.  We are happy to announce that many UK Member of Parliaments keen to join the group and some of them already taken up office bearer posts in the group.     It was agreed for COSMOS and APPG to meet on a continual basis with regular updates, to further the objectives agreed upon. 
Reported by: Liyas Abdul Wahid -General Secretary 
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by     (2018-06-30 13:53:10)
(Lanka e News -30.June.2018, 7.00PM) Council of Sri Lankan Muslim Organizations (COSMOS) UK, the umbrella organization for twenty six Sri Lankan Muslim Organizations based in UK is pleased to announce the historic landmark of the inauguration of  the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Council of Sri Lankan Muslim Organisations (COSMOS) UK on Thursday 28th June 2018 at Committee Room 17 of the House of Commons, London. The meeting was initiated and chaired by Hon. Bob Blackman, The MP for Harrow East, and attended by a cross section of MPs and House of Lords , including The Rt. Hon. The Lord Naseby , Hon. Tan Singh Dhesi MP for Slough  and Liz Mc Inness MP, Shadow Minister for Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs ,  Sri Lankan born The Mayor Cllr.  Kareema Marikar of London Borough of Harrow was also present at this meeting. 
The purpose of this APPG was ''To support, and take up issues raised by COSMOS, relating to Sri Lankan Muslim issues, towards protecting their rights, and promoting peaceful co-existence, in the context of the goodwill prevailing between the two countries, thereby, ushering in, a strong relationship between the two peoples of both counties United Kingdom and Sri Lanka’. Chair of COSMOS UK Azahim Mohammed thanked Mr. Blackman for the initiative taken and support provided in this regard. COSMOS Team made representations to the MPs regarding the background to the challenges faced by the Muslims of Sri Lanka and stressed the need to build upon this historic step, in order to help towards promoting the peaceful co-existence in Sri Lanka and also use the good offices of the UK government to call upon the Sri Lankan government to protect minority rights and the rights of Muslims to live as equal citizens, as per constitutional and international obligations. 
The Parliamentarians present pledged to work towards these objectives, by strengthening the group and also regularly take such issues up with the relevant authorities at the appropriate times through cross party consensual approach.  We are happy to announce that many UK Member of Parliaments keen to join the group and some of them already taken up office bearer posts in the group.     It was agreed for COSMOS and APPG to meet on a continual basis with regular updates, to further the objectives agreed upon. 
Reported by: Liyas Abdul Wahid -General Secretary 
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by     (2018-06-30 13:53:10)


In response to a remark made by Udayanga Weeratunga through his counsel, the Attorney General yesterday informed Court that Udayanga cannot return to the country voluntarily since he is being under judicial custody in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

State Counsel Udara Karunatilleke appearing on behalf of the Attorney General informed Colombo Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne that Udayanga will have to face legal procedure adopted under Extradition Laws.

‘The prosecution is happy with the new stance of Udayanga that he will return to Sri Lanka. Earlier, Udayanga was of the view that he would never come to Sri Lanka,’ the State Counsel said.

Meanwhile, State Counsel Karunatilleke stated as of June 27 this year, Udayanga was detained under UAE federal judicial custody. The UAE authorities have commenced legal proceeding into the extradition of Udayanga. If Udayanga informed the UAE court that he is ready to return to Sri Lanka, he can be brought immediately after terminating extradition proceedings.

He can be boarded on a Sri Lankan Airlines flight which is considered as a territory of Sri Lanka even in the UAE.

“Then he can be arrested by Sri Lankan authorities,” State Counsel Karunatilleke said.

Meanwhile, Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne also observed that Udayanga cannot visit Sri Lanka as he wished since he is a person wanted for a cognisable offence.

‘He is not an ordinary person now. He was a person wanted for a cognisable offence,’ the Magistrate observed.

The Attorney General informed Court that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has officially made a request from UAE authorities for the extradition of Udayanga Weeratunga.

The Court was also informed that the FCID has commenced an investigation into an incident where a sum of US$ 26,800 deposited in a local bank by Udayanga had been transferred to a bank account belonging to him in UAE, despite Central Bank restrictions.

The Colombo Fort Magistrate had issued an open warrant written in English through the Interpol for the arrest of former Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga.

Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne had made this order pursuant to a request made by FCID citing that he is continuously evading courts.

The FCID conducting investigation into MiG aircraft transaction had named Udayanga Weeratunga as a suspect in the case through a B report filed in the Fort Magistrate’s Court.

The Court was informed through FCID that INTERPOL had issued a ‘Red Warrant’ on Udayanga Weeratunga, naming him as a fugitive wanted by the Sri Lankan authorities.

The FCID had informed Court that Udayanga Weeratunga had directly intervened into the questionable transaction in procuring MiG-27 ground attack crafts. The FCID said the deal amounted to US$14 million.

On June 9, 2016 the Colombo Fort Magistrate had issued notices on Udayanga Weeratunga to appear in Court July 15 but he did not turn up. Thereafter, on October 20, 2016, court Had issued a warrant for the arrest of Udayanga Weeratunga.

The FCID had told Court that they were investigating whether the former Sri Lankan ambassador in Russia had invested money in a company called Sri Lankan Limited Liability Company in Moscow, which were earned through the Mig-27 transaction.

Meanwhile, the FCID named foreign nationals and foreign company as suspects regarding this case.
The FCID launched this investigation following a complaint lodged by defence columnist and political writer Iqbal Athas.

In his complaint to the FCID, journalist Iqbal Athas stated that he had written several articles regarding the financial irregularities that had taken place in procuring four MiG-27 aircraft at a higher price. He told the police that these ground attack aircrafts had been manufactured between 1980 and 1983. He said financial irregularities had taken place during the transaction between Sri Lank and Ukraine.

Chief Inspector Nihal Francis appeared for FCID.
****
Udayanga to return to Sri Lanka - Defence Counsel
Lakmal Sooriyagoda

Former Ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga through his counsel yesterday informed Court that he would voluntarily return to Sri Lanka.

President’s Counsel Anil de Silva appearing on behalf of Weeratunga, a first cousin of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa made these remarks when the magisterial inquiry against Udayanga Weeratunga over alleged financial fraud that is alleged to have taken place in procuring seven MiG-27 ground attack air craft for the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLFA) was taken up for inquiry.

However, Defence Counsel did not reveal any particular date suggesting Udayanga’s arrival and said he will be here soon after the relevant procedure is over.

“My client will be present in Court. He had been in Russia since 1994.

He is a student and a businessman in Russia. He is expecting to return with his wife and children. He would not come immediately. He would be here as soon as procedure pertaining to his children is concluded,” the Defence Counsel said. 
 

Friday, June 29, 2018

Israel extends detention of French human rights defender

Activists have mobilized strong support for Salah Hamouri, the Palestinian-French human rights defender jailed by Israel without charge or trial since last August. But the French government appears to be doing nothing to secure his release. (via Facebook)

Ali Abunimah- 29 June 2018
Ignoring the mild protestations of the French government, Israeli defense minister Avigdor Lieberman has extended the administrative detention of Palestinian-French human rights defender Salah Hamouri for an additional three months.
Like the 430 other administrative detainees held by Israel, Hamouri has been imprisoned without charge or trial since he was seized by Israeli occupation forces from his home in occupied East Jerusalem last August.
Hamouri works as a researcher with prisoners rights group Addameer.
On Thursday, the left-wing newspaper L’Humanité asked the French foreign ministry for its reaction to the extension and what France is doing to secure Hamouri’s freedom.
“We can only regret this decision, on which an Israeli court is expected to rule in coming days,” the ministry responded.
That presumably refers to a hearing scheduled for Sunday, in which, based on previous experience, an Israeli military judge will almost certainly confirm the defense minister’s decision.
The French foreign ministry added that since Hamouri’s arrest, “we have not ceased sending specific requests to the Israeli authorities, in order that his administrative detention be brought to an end.”
It noted that President Emmanuel Macron had personally raised Hamouri’s case during meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
But as L’Humanité observes, neither Macron, nor France’s foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian have publicly mentioned Hamouri’s case.

France-Israel Season

And in its public statements, the French government has pointedly not demanded Hamouri’s immediate release – only saying that it “hopes” he will be freed soon.
Israel’s comfort with ignoring requests, even from Macron, is not surprising given his government’s policy of rewarding Israel unconditionally no matter what it does.
While Hamouri languishes in an Israeli cell, it is full steam ahead for the Saison France-Israël, or France-Israel Season, a months-long series of propaganda events backed by both countries to boost Israel’s image.
On 5 June, Macron rolled out the red carpet for Netanyahu for the gala launch event in Paris as Palestine solidarity activists shut down the Champs-Élysées, many carrying signs demanding Hamouri’s release.
Also this month, dozens of Israeli weapons companies displayed their deadly wares at the Eurosatory arms fair the French government organized in Paris, including the maker of rifles that have been used by Israeli snipers to massacre unarmed Palestinians protesting in Gaza.
Despite the government’s inaction, there has been an outpouring of support for Hamouri in France, as campaigners continue to mobilize for his release.
On 19 June, Fabien Gay, a senator from the Paris region, tweeted that Hamouri had been imprisoned by Israel for 300 days, “with no trial and no access to his file in order to defend himself.”
300 jours que notre compatriote @salah_hamouri est emprisonné dans les geôles israéliennes. Sans procès et sans pouvoir accéder à son dossier pour se défendre. @LiberezSalah ! On ne t’oublie pas et restons à tes côtés !
“We won’t forget you, we are by your side,” Gay added.

Honorary citizen

Prisoners solidarity group Samidoun notes that Hamouri has “received the official support of dozens of French cities and towns and over 1,700 elected officials.”
In some towns, according to Samidoun, “mayors who have hung banners for Hamouri’s freedom have faced orders and judicial complaints in an attempt to force their removal, despite the fact that urging Hamouri’s release is ostensibly the official position of the French government.”
Samidoun adds that the renewal of his detention comes just days before Hamouri is due to be declared an honorary citizen of the town of Montcel, in a ceremony expected to be attended by the mayor and the local member of parliament.
Hamouri’s parents, and his wife Elsa Lefort, who has coordinated the campaign for her partner’s release, are expected to address the ceremony by video link from Jerusalem.
This week, more than 200 organizations around the world signed a statement urging actions and protests to demand that Israel release Khalida Jarrar, the Palestinian lawmaker and feminist who has been imprisoned without charge or trial for almost a year.
On 14 June, according to Samidoun, Jarrar was told her administrative detention would be extended for another four months, an order that is expected to be confirmed by an Israeli military court on 2 July.

An Israeli-Palestinian Confederation Can Work

The two-state solution is dead. Most one-state solutions are unacceptable to the other side. There is, however, a viable peace plan that appeals to both.


No automatic alt text available.BY DAHLIA SCHEINDLIN-JUNE 29, 2018

Between mayhem at the Gaza border and U.S.-Israeli triumphalism, it is becoming impossible to imagine a serious peace process between Israel and the Palestinians, let alone an agreement anytime soon. But none of this will distract Palestinians from their quest for liberation. And for Israelis, that means the conflict will never truly be over.

Many commentators have declared the two-state solution dead, while others cling to the concept stubbornly. From Israel’s side, the possibility looks beyond remote. Israel’s long-serving leader Benjamin Netanyahu has steadfastly thwarted a two-state solution for years.

 Nearly a decade ago, he gave one speechexpressing hypothetical, circumscribed support for the concept. Since then, he has presided over halfhearted, failed negotiations. He has insisted that Jerusalem won’t be divided and that there will be no Palestinian state on his watch. One of his current coalition partners, the Jewish Home party, is dead-set against the idea.

Nor will the Israeli public lead the charge. In a December 2017 joint Israeli-Palestinian survey I conducted with the Palestinian pollster Khalil Shikaki, just over half of Israelis — 52 percent — supported the broad notion of a two-state solution, a steady decline from more than 70 percent in 2010. That figure includes Arab Israeli respondents who support two states by 83 percent; among Israeli Jews, just 46 percent supports this solution. If you show respondents the details of the traditional two-state plan developed in the 2000s, support sinks to a minority on both sides.

When it comes to the land where a Palestinian state might be located, the picture becomes even more complicated. Israel directly controls 60 percent of the West Bank, including a thick perimeter connected by a series of lines that dissect the middle. This is Area C, where the Israeli military is responsible for both the security and civil affairs of the approximately 400,000 Israeli settlers (not including East Jerusalem) and between 200,000 and 400,000 Palestinians, according to combined data from the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, United Nations agencies, and Palestinian sources.

 The latter are ruled under martial law; the remaining areas A and B are governed by the Palestinian Authority, but the Israeli army has ultimate sovereignty over the entire West Bank.

The idea of annexing the West Bank once would have been considered extremist and impractical. Today, incremental annexation starting with Area C is rapidly being legitimized in Israel.

 Naftali Bennett, the head of the Jewish Home party, is calling for the complete annexation of Area C. In 2017, the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, passed a law to legalize settlements on land expropriated from private Palestinian owners. Netanyahu’s Likud party passed a nonbinding but influential party resolution calling to annex settlement areas of the West Bank. And, in late May, a prominent member of Israel’s erstwhile dovish Labor Party published a controversial article arguing for the annexation of mostly the same territory.

If Area C becomes part of Israel, only the hollowed-out patches in between would be left over for a future Palestine. The prospect of living in state under these terms is losing support among Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, too: Like Israeli Jews, just 46 percent of those Palestinians supported the two-state concept in the same December survey.

Finally, two-state experts now say that, at a minimum, more than 160,000 Jewish settlers (there is no genuine consensus on the number) would have to move for a future Palestine to have basic territorial contiguity. Israel moved just 8,500 people from Gaza in 2005; from then on, the Israeli right has devoted itself to preventing another so-called expulsion.


Above: Israeli Border Police evict right-wing Jewish extremists on June 30, 2005, from the Gush Katif settlement in the southern Gaza Strip. (Yoray Liberman/Getty Images) Top: A Muslim man walks by the "separation barrier" in East Jerusalem on November 27, 2014. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Activists, scholars, and pundits — especially those who have observed the territorial realities closely — have been seeking a new vision from both sides of the political divide for some years. They have mapped out paths, like alternate routes on a GPS to a destination just over the horizon, whose contours are not yet visible.

In the quest for alternatives to the traditional two-state solution, many terms are being thrown around, generating mostly confusion. “One state” means little until one knows if it is a democratic state, with de jure equality of all citizens, or an apartheid state, in which one group is disenfranchised or lives under different laws. “Parallel states,” described in an intriguing 2014 book, actually means stacked-pancake states. The terms “confederation” and “federation” are used interchangeably, inaccurately, or both; they may refer to Israel and Palestine or to Israel and Jordan.

To clarify the options, it’s essential to examine the core principles guiding the Israeli right and left in the name of peace.

The shared goal of the right is Jewish Israeli control, for the sake of cultural dominance and religious fulfillment.

 There was once another reason, too. In 2003, then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon stated that “it is not in our interest to govern” the Palestinians and that “the disengagement plan is a security measure.” Today’s right has instead concluded the opposite: that Israel’s continued control is necessary for physical security as well.

By contrast, the primary shared goal of the left — including Jews and Palestinians — is ending the half-century military occupation through political independence for Palestinians. Whether this happens through one state or two is a point of internal disagreement; so is the question of Palestinian refugee claims going back to 1948. But all agree on the need to end military occupation and achieve political rights. With these distinctions in mind, it becomes easier to characterize the different plans proposing alternatives to two states.

A federation or confederation between Israel and Jordan implies Israeli control of all territory between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River; it is a right-wing vision for Jewish Israeli control of the land Palestinians claim as their state. The same is true of the one-state model for Israel and the West Bank, in which Palestinians would be unequal to Israelis. Plans or statements supporting annexation while denying Palestinians full citizenship and civil rights have been proposed in detail by a radical right-wing parliamentarian from the Jewish Home party, Bezalel Smotrich, who is also a deputy speaker of the Knesset. The Likud lawmaker Miki Zohar proposed similar ideas in a television interview. Even Labor’s Eitan Cabel, who advocated annexing the settlement blocs in May, proposed in an interview that Palestinians living in those areas would not have citizenship; he later retracted that statement when his party kicked up a storm. But the incident shows how this once extreme approach is creeping into the mainstream.

The idea of one state in which certain residents lack civil rights has troubled some mainstream Israeli political and security leaders

, such as former Prime Minister Ehud Barak and the late Meir Dagan, the former head of the Mossad intelligence agency, both of whom characterized steps in this direction as “apartheid.” Even some figures on the right have warned of the A-word in those scenarios, such as Moti Ohana, the lone Likud member who voted against his party’s resolution promoting annexation. President Reuven Rivlin, from Netanyahu’s Likud party, worried that Israel would look like an apartheid state if the new law to recognize settlements were applied. (The law is currently being challenged in the Supreme Court.)

However, other than the little-read plans published by Bennett and his party member Smotrich, the right has been somewhat reticent about formal annexation programs, focusing more on political slogans. “Sovereignty!” is a popular poster seen all around West Bank settlements. For four years, an annual conference devoted to Israeli sovereignty led by settlers has attracted a range of right-wingers, including government ministers. A common theme in these circles is the assertion that “Jordan is the Palestinian state,” which is brandished as a justification for denying Palestinians national rights in the West Bank and Gaza. On my recent visit to the Jewish community of Hebron, two settlers displayed mild disagreement about whether Palestinians should have the right to vote if Israel became sovereign in the area: One preferred that they not have the right to vote, while another felt confident allowing it — convinced that most Palestinians would not exercise the right.

It’s not even clear if Netanyahu has a vision, as he has stayed mostly silent about what should happen with the Palestinians. Yet his policies have led to the creeping de facto annexation of Area C and the deepening fragmentation of Palestinian territory and society. His occasional references to a “state-minus” hint at his approach; it is not one that can ever satisfy Palestinians.

The left’s plans, motivated by the goal of Palestinian independence, include one equal state, parallel states, and a federation or confederation between Israel and the Palestinians. These ideas all acknowledge a complex reality in which developments on the ground have suffocated Palestinians’ physical space and fragmented their society but which have also created geographic and economic interdependence. Like puzzle pieces jutting into one another, the lines exist, but the pieces must come together for a coherent picture to emerge.

Jerusalem, the proverbial microcosm, makes this clear. By the municipality’s own assessment, up to half of the Palestinian workforce of East Jerusalem works in West Jerusalem, in settlements in the east, or in other parts of Israel. Dividing the city would be a massive economic blow. Palestinians in East Jerusalem have traditionally boycotted municipal elections since 1967 as a rejection of Israel’s authority there. But the Palestinian political stigma against voting in Jerusalem is fading among younger generations. Many younger Palestinians in Jerusalem like to hang out in the west’s bars and art spaces; some send their children to bilingual schools and Hebrew University; and as many as three Palestinians have announced that they will form lists to run in October’s municipal elections — whether they stay the course through the elections, or possibly merge, remains to be seen. Few on either side want to divide the city. Only around 25 percent of the public on both sides accepts the division of Jerusalem, as recorded in the December survey.

Accordingly, the newer left-leaning peace ideas still seek the right dosage of separation, in deference to national identities. But recognizing the economic and social dangers, or the impossibility, of ripping the sides apart, they are also testing dosages of togetherness. Some plans foster physical and political integration, while others retain a structure of separation.

Federation is a plan for integration. The United States and Germany are federations: unitary states with a central government, the only body that enters into foreign relations. An Israeli-Palestinian federation could have two national regions — like the bizonal/bicommunal federation concept in Cyprus — but the two peoples would sit in one legislature and share power an in executive. That’s hard to imagine for two nations that have been in a bitter struggle for 70 years. Indeed, the only government shared by Greek and Turkish Cypriots lasted just three years before it collapsed in 1963. Negotiations in Cyprus that began in 1968 have failed for 50 years. The inability to agree on a new formula for sharing power in a single government has stymied any resolution.

The idea of “parallel states” — proposed in Mathias Mossberg and Mark LeVine’s 2014 book, One Land, Two States — allows for complete geographic integration. Anyone could live anywhere, but an Israeli and a Palestinian living one floor apart in the same building would be subject to separate laws; “stacked states” seems more appropriate than “parallel,” implying two lines that never touch. This approach raises considerable legal, ethical, and practical problems, but beyond those, neither side truly wishes to blend people and cultures in a common physical space.


 
Israeli soldiers stand on bulldozed farm land as they watch as Palestinian, Israeli and foreign peace activists protest the building of the Israeli separation barrier in the West Bank village of Walajeh in August 2007. The barrier is supposed to follow the Green Line that marks Israel's borders before the 1967 Six Day War. MUSA AL-SHAER/AFP/Getty Images

An Israeli-Palestinian confederation, by contrast, would start with the building blocks of two separate and territorially defined independent states. Promoted largely by the civil society group A Land for All, among others, the idea is that there would be two governments, two heads of state, and a border on or near the pre-1967 division, known as the Green Line. Each state would be sovereign and free to define its national character. But a confederation would diverge from the traditional two-state model by creating an agreement to share certain aspects of their sovereignty. The border would be porous, designed to facilitate rather than limit crossings. Freedom of movement — to tour, work, or study — would be the default, restricted only for individuals who pose a specific security threat.

Today, the reverse is the norm. All people are restricted from crossing boundaries; everyone theoretically needs a permit to go somewhere. In practice, Palestinians are severely constrained in their daily life. West Bank residents need a permit to travel anywhere inside Israel, including the settlements and Jerusalem, or between Gaza and the West Bank; an airport permit is almost unobtainable. The permit allowances are byzantine by design and are commonly denied, and checkpoints and the security wall make short distances into lengthy, tortuous trips for all Palestinians. Gazans are almost entirely trapped inside Gaza. Porous borders would release Palestinians from this suffocating constraint on their physical movement.

Israeli Jews face few movement restrictions today. Theoretically, they need a permit to visit the small, Palestinian-run Area A, where most Jews have little desire to be. In fact, there is no real barrier other than a warning sign — and they can glide through settler-designated checkpoints on the return. But full freedom of movement offers Israeli Jews, especially religious ones, something they may not have in a traditional two-state plan: access to the many holy sites inside the West Bank, such as the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron, Rachel’s Tomb near Bethlehem, and Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus — the last is almost inaccessible to Jews today. In a traditional two-state solution, these sites would be well inside Palestine, and the latter could close its border; this is one of numerous reasons Israelis, especially if they are religious, have little interest in reaching such a solution. The confederation model is predicated on open access.

Instead of carving up Jerusalem, the city would remain united under shared sovereignty as the capital of two states. Holy places would be governed by a special regime, possibly with international support, just like in earlier two-state plans. But the delicate urban fabric of Jerusalem would remain intact, with an added Palestinian capital in the east. The border between the two states could run widely around the city, rather than through it. An umbrella municipality of Israelis and Palestinians could run east and west boroughs.

Free movement and a united Jerusalem would require advanced security measures. Such measures could be grounded in the principle of strong security cooperation, based on the system set up by the Oslo Accords still in place today. At present, Israeli security figures commonly cite the ongoing cooperation with Palestinian Authority forces as the main reason there has not been more violence over the last decade. Living under occupation, Palestinians today deeply resent what they consider collaboration, or the “outsourcing” of Israel’s rule to their own security forces. But if Palestine were free under its own civilian government, coordinated security would protect the arrangement itself, serving people rather than controlling them.

The centerpiece of the confederation approach is allowing citizens of one side to live as permanent residents on the other while voting in national elections only in their country of citizenship.

 Israeli settlers who absolutely must live on holy ground could stay so long as they are law-abiding residents under Palestinian sovereignty; they could participate in local elections but would only vote for national representation in Israel. This will alienate settlers who insist on Jewish sovereignty — but it extends a hand to more moderate settlers who have long resented the left-wing expectation that they must all automatically uproot their homes.

The same provision is a creative concession to Palestinians, since it allows some refugees from 1948 back into Israel under the same terms: permanent residency, provided they are law-abiding and perhaps after Israeli security vetting. The numbers could be determined through mutual agreement. Those residents would vote in national elections only in Palestine and, like settlers, could vote in local Israeli elections. This concept responds to one of the most intractable problems in the conflict: Palestinians insist on recognition of their right to ancestral lands, while Israelis live in mortal fear of returning Palestinians demographically destroying the Jewish state by voting the Jewish government out of office.

In previous rounds of negotiations, the refugee issue has been among the greatest points of contention and remains so in public opinion surveys. Under the confederation proposal, neither side can dominate the national politics of the other, since they may only vote in the state of their national identity.

Other forms of infrastructural cooperation are less emotional but highly pragmatic. Today, the two sides already use the same currency and buy each other’s goods: In 2012, the Bank of Israel found that 81 percent of Palestinian exported goods were sold to Israel while the country sold about $4.5 billion worth of goods to the Palestinian Authority. These numbers have only grown since.
Israeli tech companies have begun hiring Palestinian programmers, quietly but successfully, providing an opportunity for Palestinians who are well-educated but unemployed. Deepening these ties through easier physical mobility and professional associations can only benefit both economies.

All this can continue — again, minus Israel’s Oslo-era controls over Palestinian economic life through tax collection and controls over imports and exports. A professional economic council could help manage the difficulties of integrating a weaker economy with a much stronger one. This is a serious challenge. But the alternative of a separated Palestinian state with a hard border, and little access and mobility to Israel, could also lead to economic isolation — which could exacerbate rather than de-escalate the conflict.

Similarly, it hardly seems possible to manage natural resources and infrastructure separately; already, Gaza’s waste floats onto Israel’s nearby beaches, pollutes aquifers, and has forced desalination plants to shut down at times — all while Israel is now reviving its water-saving campaigns due to shortages. The traditional two-state solution would require coordination on essential environmental issues too, but the confederation model favors it in spirit and structure, facilitating both civil society and government coordination instead of making such cooperation the exception.

The liaison is ultimately voluntary. In a federation, secession can lead to war. A confederation approach allows each side the legal right to leave

. Legal secession can be peaceful, such as the referendum-based separation of Serbia and Montenegro in 2006 or Brexit (if it is ever implemented).

The attempt to combine policies from the two-state solution, while drawing on one-state ideas both for pragmatic and symbolic needs, makes this approach appealing for a small but eclectic group from Israel’s left and right, as well as some Palestinians and Arab citizens of Israel. Yossi Beilin, a former stalwart supporter and negotiator for a two-state solution, openly favors it, and President Rivlin has endorsed the idea, albeit without elaborating just what he means.

Only the future will tell whether Israelis and Palestinians choose to live closer together or further apart. But they are unlikely to reach a peace agreement that is only one or the other.
 
Dahlia Scheindlin is a political analyst and a public opinion expert; she is a regular writer at +972 magazine and a policy fellow at Mitvim — The Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies. Dahlia also co-hosts The Tel Aviv Review podcast, on TLV1 Radio. (@dahliasc)

Will an alleged war criminal become president of Myanmar? 

The International Criminal Court may try to put Senior General Min Aung Hlaing on trial, he may run for president or he may just stay where he is

Myanmar military chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing salutes during military exercises in the Ayeyarwaddy delta region in February 2018. Photo: AFP/Pool/STRMyanmar military chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing salutes during military exercises in the Ayeyarwaddy delta region in February 2018. Photo: AFP/Pool/STR

 JUNE 28, 2018