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

Thursday, July 5, 2018

Treasury bond scam:
Ravi’s company received Rs. 5mn from PTL subsidiary

... altogether 2,487 cheques worth Rs. 1,137 mn issued



article_image
Ravi

By A.J. Abeynayake- 

Additional Solicitor General Yasantha Kodagoda yesterday told the Fort Magistrate court that Perpetual Treasuries subsidiary, W. M. Mendis and Company had paid Rs. 5mn to a company owned by UNP MP Ravi Karunanayake in 2017.

Making submissions before Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne on behalf of the Attorney General, Kodagoda said that a cheque issued by W. M. Mendis and Company had been encashed by Sunil Anderson Perera, an employee of Certis Lanka courier service and the money handed over to Brian Sinniah, Chief Financial Officer of Global Transportation and Logistics private Limited.

Kodagoda told the court that three phones and five SIM cards, hidden in ‘H’ ward where PTL owner Arjun Aloysius and its CEO Kasun Palisena, had been found during a special operation carried out by the prison authorities following information they were in touch with their families and others involved in the treasury bond scams.

The court was told that one of the phones had been found under the mattress of Aloysius.

It was revealed in court that the PTL between 2015.02.06 and 2016.9.30 had transferred Rs. 173 mn to W. M. Mendis and Company and the latter between 2015.01.30 and 2016.9.30 issued 2,487 cheques to the tune of Rs. 1,137 mn.

Fort Magistrate Jayaratne has directed that PTL Chairman Geoffrey Joseph Aloysius and seven other directors should leave the country without court approval.

PTL owner Arjuna Aloysius and its CEO Kasun Palisena were further remanded till July 19. They were arrested on Feb. 4, 2018.

Gaddafi leadership style and ‘disruptive model’ for business



logoThursday, 5 July 2018 

Link to Sri Lanka business

In this era of ‘disruption’, sometimes it’s important to pick people who work against the grain and develop an output that is not seen in the world. Whilst many of us were against this leadership style of Gaddafi, given the global economic fallout and that stock markets have been reeling after the proposed US trade tax on Chinese imports announced by Trump, sometimes we might ask how did Libya have a social welfare system which was better than any other country at that time or even many today.


Gaddafi output

I remember being in the annual ‘Leadership in Development’ program at Harvard around six years ago when Gaddafi was captured and subsequently executed. We debated the thinking of this leader and shared the facts that we unearthed.

Apparently electricity was free for all its citizens. There was no interest on loans and all its citizens were at a 0% interest by law. Home was considered a human right in Libya at that time. All newlyweds in Libya received 60,000 Dinars ($ 50,000) from the Government to buy their first apartment. Education and medical treatment were free in Libya. Before Gaddafi, only 25% of Libyans were literate. By 2010 it was up to 83%.

If Libyans took up farming as a career, they received farmland, a farmhouse, equipment, seeds and livestock to kick-start their farms – all for free. At that time if a Libyan bought a car, the Government subsidised 50% of the price. The price of petrol in Libya at that time was $ 0. 14 per litre (Rs. 22). Libya had no external debt at that time and its reserves amounted to $ 150 billion – now of course it is frozen globally.

If a Libyan was unable to get employment after graduation, the state would pay the average salary of the profession as if he or she was employed until employment was found. A mother who gave birth to a child under the Gaddafi regime received $ 5,000 as a child benefit upfront whilst during that time 40 loaves of bread in Libya cost $ 0.15. Gaddafi had carried out the world’s largest irrigation project, known as the Man Made River Project, to make water readily available throughout this desert country.

If one terms this a disruptive way of running a country and serving the people, could this be a new model for running a country? This was what we debated that day at Harvard. During one of his last meetings, where he addressed his nation, he said: “I will not go into exile to any foreign country. I was born here in Libya and I will die here. This country was a desert and I turned it into a forest where everything can grow. No one can love this land more than its citizens. If Europe and America tell you that they love you, be careful. They love the wealth of your land. The oil and not the people. They are helping you to fight against me but it will be wiser for you to fight against them because they are fighting against your future and progress.”

Be that as it may, let me pick up the key lessons for business from the man who the world loved to hate – Muammar Gaddafi.

1) Revolutionary decisions: When he was just 27 years he led the coup that overthrew the monarchy in Libya. He then went on to ban gambling and alcohol and declare Islamic socialism which created a new ethos of leadership and governance in Libya, which were revolutionary decisions he made that made him a very strong brand.

Gaddafi lesson 1: To make a brand stand out in the marketplace, it’s important to create a revolution in the marketplace just like what Apple did with its iPad, which broke all records even though consumers were struggling to make ends meet in the US and EU.

In Sri Lanka today PickMe is an entity which has revolutionised the mobility market. The other day one of its owners said they were changing the system for Sri Lankans “not to own a car” but use PickMe for even systemic lifestyles like going to work and back daily or picking up children after school. Let’s see if this becomes a reality.

2) Be contemporary: Gaddafi was known for his decorative military uniforms and affluent lifestyle which includes living in luxury tents rather than at five star hotels during his visits to other countries. He carved out a niche globally for female bodyguards whom he surrounded himself with, which made him look modern and forward-thinking.

Gaddafi lesson 2: Sometimes we wonder how a localised brand like Chandralepa keeps itself trendy given that the woman of today is going through a radical change in the clothes she wears, the music she listens to and the interests she maintains.

The trick we see is that Chadralepa keeps changing their offerings to the woman of today so that she feels pampered and interested in the brand. A continuous change in high-quality communication - TV advertising and social media.

3) Aim for milestones: Apart from the high-quality oil that Libya sold to the world, the country was known for the supply of weapons to the global market, especially when the five-tonne ship was intercepted by the British authorities in 1973. Then again another ship carrying 120 tonnes of weapons and ammunition was stopped in 1987 but by that time Gaddafi was said to have been a billionaire.

Gaddafi lesson 3: When it comes to a brand, this same objective holds ground. We have to get the scoreboard ticking to cross a milestone mark. In the recent past Maliban biscuits is a classic example in Sri Lanka of developing new products increasing distribution with a strong information system that has made the organisation triple in the top-line. The only difference is that Maliban does ethical business whilst being ruthlessly aggressive in the marketplace.

4) Be erratic and practice disruption: President Ronald Regan once branded Colonel Muammar Gaddafi a “mad dog” due to his erratic behaviour and outlandish antics, which included his self-styled leadership of a ‘Brother Leader’. In 1984, a diplomat at the Libyan Embassy in London shot a demonstrator outside, which led to the killing of policewoman Tnvonne Fletcher.

Gaddafi lesson 4: In Sri Lanka I see this in the brand marketing practices of the radio and TV industry. Its Gaddafi-style cutthroat competition is coupled with outlandish antics that exist at its best, be it above or below the line. One company that stands out from the crowd is Hiru TV and Radio. The brands are so market driven that they won 5 Peoples Awards for their disruptive reporting of news. Was the company going against the industry grain in the product delivery? Yes it was and it did capture the hearts of Sri Lankans which is what is important.

5) Be different: To celebrate Gaddafi’s 30th anniversary of the revolution he showcased to the world a car which was designed by him. One government official classified the vehicle as the safest car in the world due to the specific features it contained.

Gaddafi lesson 5: Sometimes to get attention from the public you have to design in a totally different manner, just like what Gaddafi did. My pick is the Daily FT brand. It was the first newspaper to go entirely cream and the first business newspaper that clearly differentiates itself from other newspapers in content and design. Within just two years the brand was leveraging readers, which other newspapers have taken a decade to achieve, and a sought-after must-read among the movers and shakers of Sri Lanka. So I guess Gaddafi style marketing sure helps in today’s world.

6) Hit man: There were eight recorded attempts of unsuccessful assassination operations to eliminate the Libyan leader. In 1993, intelligence reported that almost 2,000 soldiers from the Warfalla tribe were plotting to kill Gaddafi.

Gaddafi lesson 6: When I look back at the strategies adopted by the brand Ninja mosquito coil with the trusted brand Mortein, it’s similar to the eight assassination attempts made on the Libyan dictator, starting with the launch of the first 10-hour mosquito coil to the cutting-edge dealer incentives that have made this brand a power brand today, close on the heels of Mortein. The essence is that in today’s world the hit man behaviour sometimes works.

7) White glove: After the Lockerbie bombing, Gaddafi started wearing a white glove to avoid coming into contact with the “blood-stained hands” of fellow Arab leaders at the conference in June 1988. Then he went on to cover himself with a sheet when Jordan’s King Hussein was addressing the gathering.

Gaddafi lesson 7: The white glove to me was more of a mnemonic that made Brand Gaddafi stand out just like the famous glove of Michael Jackson. I still remember the days when I managed the power brand Dettol. One diktat that I got from the global office was that ‘Dettol Green’ had to be all over a piece of communication and that the cloud break (when a drop of Dettol was dropped into water) is a non-negotiable visual that has to be there. I guess the challenge is to decide what that glove was going to showcase on a brand. For the brand Dulux it is the dog whilst for Nike it’s the swoosh.

8) Philosophy: An independent political analyst who has interviewed the Libyan leader many times describes Gaddafi as a philosophical personality with a reflective temperament. He once offered to stop the influx of Africans into various European countries so that Europe could be ‘white and civilised’.

Gaddafi lesson 8: Any brand/company must have its philosophical side to business. I yet remember the famous announcement by Unilever’s Senior Vice President Marketing Marc Mathieu who said that in the next 10 years the business ethos was ‘More Magic and Less Logic’ and the company is experiencing some of the most outstanding brand results. It is a clear indication of the entrepreneurial and disruptive attitude to business that is required in today’s world. The world needs such new theories and new business models. All must adjust.


Where Gaddafi went wrong

From the news reports coming on the sixth commemoration of Gaddafi, one of the noteworthy projects that Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has done for the people was the project for water security which will hold the people of the country in good stead even though the country sits on a desert.

However, the issue was that the negatives outweighed the positives of the man. This made the people and world revolt against him. Maybe with some strong marketing on the positives and some checks and balances, history may have been written differently. But to me these are the eight pick-ups for the new world.

(The author is an award-winning marketer, business personality and internationally sought-after speaker. He is the Country Director for a global multinational. The thoughts expressed are strictly personal in nature).

Sisi holds key to Trump's Sinai plan for Palestinians


Reports suggest Trump could be about to unveil massive relief programme, but on condition Palestinians work in Egypt under Israel's 'Greater Gaza' plan

Jonathan Cook's picture
Israel and the US are in a race against time with Gaza. The conundrum is stark: how to continue isolating the tiny coastal enclave from the outside world and from the West Bank – to sabotage any danger of a Palestinian state emerging – without stoking a mass revolt from Gaza's two million Palestinians?
In Gaza, Israel does not have the luxury of time it enjoys in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the two additional Palestinian territories it occupies. In those areas, it can keep chipping away at the Palestinian presence, using the Israeli army, Jewish settlers and tight restrictions on Palestinian movement to take over key resources like land and water.

Gaza: A death camp

While Israel is engaged in a war of attrition with the West Bank's population, a similar, gradualist approach in Gaza is rapidly becoming untenable. The United Nations has warned that the enclave may be only two years away from becoming “uninhabitable”, its economy in ruins and its water supplies unpotable.
More than a decade of a severe Israeli blockade as well as a series of military assaults have plunged much of Gaza into the dark ages. Israel desperately needs a solution, before Gaza's prison turns into a death camp. And now, under cover of Donald Trump's "ultimate peace plan", Israel appears to be on the brink of an answer.
More than a decade of a severe Israeli blockade and a series of military assaults have plunged much of Gaza into the dark ages. Israel desperately needs a solution, before Gaza's prison turns into a death camp
Recent weeks have been rife with reports in the Israeli and Arab media of moves by Washington and Israel to pressure Egypt into turning over a swath of territory in northern Sinai, next to Gaza, for infrastructure projects designed to alleviate the enclave’s "humanitarian crisis".
Late last month Hamas, which rules Gaza, sent a delegation to Cairo to discuss the measures. This followed hot on the heels of a visit to Egypt by Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law who is overseeing the Middle East peace plan.

Exploiting Egyptian fears

According to reports, Trump hopes soon to unveil a package – associated with his "deal of the century" peace-making – that will commit to the construction of a solar-power grid, desalination plant, seaport and airport in Sinai, as well as a free trade zone with five industrial areas. Most of the financing will come from the oil-rich Gulf states. 
Egyptian diplomatic sources appear to have confirmed the reports. The programme has the potential to help relieve the immense suffering in Gaza, where electricity, clean water and freedom of movement are in short supply. Palestinians and Egyptians would jointly work on these projects, providing desperately needed jobs. In Gaza, youth unemployment stands at over 60 per cent.
It has been left unclear whether Palestinians from Gaza would be encouraged to live close to the Sinai projects in migrant workers' towns. Israel will doubtless hope that Palestinian workers would gradually make Sinai their permanent home.
Egypt, meanwhile, will benefit both from the huge injection of capital in an economy currently in crisis, as well as from new infrastructure that can be used for its own population in the restive Sinai peninsula. 
It is worth noting that for more than a year an Israeli cabinet minister has been proposing similar infrastructure projects for Gaza located on an artificial island to be established in Palestinian territorial waters. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly baulked at the proposal.
Locating the scheme instead in Egypt, under Cairo’s control, will tie Egyptian security concerns about Gaza to Israel's, and serve to kill the Palestinian national cause of statehood.

A decade of arm-twisting

It is important to understand that the Sinai plan is not simply evidence of wishful thinking by an inexperienced or deluded Trump administration. All the signs are that it has enjoyed long and vigorous support from the Washington policy establishment for more than a decade.
In fact, four years ago, when Barack Obama was firmly ensconced in the White House, Middle East Eye charted the course of attempts by Israel and the US to arm-twist a succession of Egyptian leaders into opening Sinai to Gaza’s Palestinians. 
This has been a key Israeli ambition since it pulled several thousand settlers out of Gaza in the so-called disengagement of 2005 and claimed afterwards – falsely – that the enclave’s occupation was over.
Washington has reportedly been on board since 2007, when the Islamist faction Hamas took control of Gaza, ousting the Fatah movement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. It was then that Israel, backed by the US, intensified its severe blockade that has destroyed Gaza’s economy and prevented key goods from entering.

A Palestinian statelet

The advantages of the Sinai plan are self-evident to Israel and the US. It would:
* make permanent the territorial division between Gaza and the West Bank, and the ideological split between the rival factions of Fatah and Hamas;
* downgrade Gaza from a diplomatic issue to a humanitarian one;
* gradually lead to the establishment of a de facto Palestinian statelet in Sinai and Gaza, mostly outside the borders of historic Palestine;
* encourage the eventual settlement of potentially millions of Palestinian refugees in Egyptian territory, stripping them of their right in international law to return to their homes, now in Israel;
* weaken the claims of Abbas and his Palestinian Authority, located in the West Bank, to represent the Palestinian cause and undermine their moves to win recognition of statehood at the United Nations;
* and lift opprobrium from Israel by shifting responsibility for repressing Gaza’s Palestinians to Egypt and the wider Arab world.

'Greater Gaza' plan

In summer 2014, Israel’s media reported that, with Washington’s blessing, Israeli officials had been working on a plan dubbed “Greater Gaza” that would attach the enclave to a large slice of northern Sinai. The reports suggested that Israel had made headway with Cairo on the idea.
Egyptian and Palestinians officials publicly responded to the leaks by denouncing the plan as "fabricated"But, whether Cairo was privately receptive or not, it provided yet further confirmation of a decade-long Israeli strategy in Gaza. 
A bulldozer demolishes the houses of settlers as part of Israel's disengagement plan in the southern Gaza Strip on 22 August 2005 (AFP)
At around the same time, an Arab newspaper interviewed a former anonymous official close to Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president ousted in 2011. He said Egypt had come under concerted pressure from 2007 onwards to annex Gaza to northern Sinai, after Hamas took control of the enclave following Palestinian elections.
Five years later, according to the same source, Mohamed Morsi, who led a short-lived Muslim Brotherhood government, sent a delegation to Washington where the Americans proposed that "Egypt cede a third of the Sinai to Gaza in a two-stage process spanning four to five years". 
And since 2014, it appears, Morsi’s successor, General Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, has faced similar lobbying.

Carrots and sticks

Suspicions that Sisi might have been close to capitulating four years ago were fuelled at that time by Abbas himself. In an interview on Egyptian TV, he said Israel’s Sinai plan had been "unfortunately accepted by some here [in Egypt]. Don’t ask me more about that. We abolished it."
Israel's neoconservative cheerleaders in Washington who reportedly leant on Mubarak in 2007 during George W Bush’s presidency, are now influencing Middle East policy again in the Trump administration.
And although Sisi appears to have stood his ground in 2014, subsequent dramatic changes in the region are likely to have weakened his hand.
Both Abbas and Hamas are more isolated than ever, and the situation in Gaza more desperate. Israel has cultivated much closer ties to the Gulf states as they fashion joint opposition to Iran. And the Trump administration has dropped even the pretence of neutrality in resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In fact, Trump's Middle East team led by Kushner adopted from the outset Israel’s so-called "outside-in" paradigm for arriving at a peace agreement.
Netanyahu and Sisi in New York on 18 September 2017 (AFP)
The idea is to use a carrot-and-stick approach – a mix of financial inducements and punitive sanctions – to bully Abbas and Hamas into making yet more major concessions to Israel that would void any meaningful idea of Palestinian statehood. Key to this idea is that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates can be recruited to help Israel in its efforts to force the Palestinian leadership’s hand.
Egypt, current reports indicate, has come under similar pressure from the Gulf to concede territory in Sinai to help Trump with his long-delayed "deal of the century".

Muslim Brotherhood threat

Sisi and his generals have good reason to be reluctant to help. After they grabbed power from Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood government, they have done everything possible to crush homegrown Islamist movements, but have faced a backlash in Sinai.
Hamas, which rules Gaza, is the sister organisation of the Muslim Brotherhood. Egypt’s generals have worried that opening the Rafah border crossing between Sinai and Gaza could bolster Islamist attacks that Egypt has struggled to contain. There are fears too in Cairo that the Sinai option would shift the burden of Gaza onto Egypt’s shoulders.
This is where Trump and Kushner may hope their skills at wheeler-dealing can achieve a breakthrough.
READ MORE ► 
Egypt’s susceptibility to financial inducements from the Gulf were on display last year when Sisi’s government agreedeffectively to sell off to Saudi Arabia two strategic Red Sea islands, Tiran and Sanafir. They guard the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba and the Suez canal.
In return, Egypt received billions of dollars in loans and investments from the kingdom, including large-scale infrastructure projects in Sinai. Israel reportedly approved the deal.
Analysts have suggested that the handover of the islands to Saudi Arabia was intended to strengthen security and intelligence cooperation between Israel, Egypt and Saudi Arabia in dealing with Islamic militants in Sinai. 
This now looks suspiciously like the prelude to Trump’s reported Sinai plan.

Over the Palestinians' heads

In March, the White House hosted 19 countries in a conference to consider new ideas for dealing with Gaza’s mounting crisis. As well as Israel, participants included representatives from Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. The Palestinians boycotted the meeting. 
Much favoured by the Trump team was a paper delivered by Yoav Mordechai, an Israeli general and key official overseeing Israel's strategy in the occupied territories. Many of his proposals – for a free trade zone and infrastructure projects in Sinai – are now being advanced.
The Sinai plan will weaken the claims of Mahmoud Abbas and his Palestinian Authority in Ramallah to represent the Palestinian cause at the United Nations (AFP)
Last month Kushner visited Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, and Jordan to drum up support. According to interviews in the Israel Hayom daily, all four Arab states are on board with the peace plan, even if it means bypassing Abbas.
Jackie Khoury, a Palestinian analyst for the Israeli Haaretz newspaper, summed up the plan’s Gaza elements: “Egypt, which has a vital interest in calming Gaza down because of the territory’s impact on Sinai, will play the policeman who restrains Hamas. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and perhaps the United Arab Emirates will pay for the projects, which will be under United Nations auspices.” 
Israel’s efforts to secure compliance from Hamas may be indicated by recent threats to invade Gaza and dissect it in two, reported through veteran Israeli journalist Ron Ben-Yishai. The US has also moved to deepen the crisis in Gaza by withholding payments to UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees. A majority of Gaza's population are refugees dependent on UN handouts.  
An advantage for Hamas in agreeing to the Sinai plan is that it would finally be freed of Israeli and Palestinian Authority controls over Gaza. It would be in a better able to sustain its rule, as long as it did not provoke Egyptian ire.

Oslo's pacification model

Israel and Washington's plans for Gaza have strong echoes of the "economic pacification" model that was the framework for the Oslo peace process of the late 1990s.
For Israel, Oslo represented a cynical chance to destroy the largely rural economy of the West Bank that Palestinians have depended on for centuries. Israel has long coveted the territory both for its economic potential and its Biblical associations.
READ MORE ►
Hundreds of Palestinian communities in the West Bank rely on these lands for agriculture, rooting them to historic locations through economic need and tradition. But uprooting the villagers – forcing them into a handful of Palestinian cities, and clearing the land for Jewish settlers – required an alternative economic model.
As part of the the Oslo process, Israel began establishing a series of industrial areas – paid for by international donors – on the so-called "seam zone" between Israel and the West Bank.
Israeli and international companies were to open factories there, employing cheap Palestinian labour with minimal safeguards. Palestinians would be transformed from farmers with a strong attachment to their lands into a casual labour force concentrated in the cities.
An additional advantage for Israel was that it would make the Palestinians the ultimate “precariat”. Should they start demanding a state or even protest for rights, Israel could simply block entry to the industrial areas, allowing hunger to pacify the population.

New prison wardens

There is every reason to believe that is now the goal of an Israeli-Trump initiative to gradually relocate Palestinians to Sinai through investment in infrastructure projects.
With the two countries' security interests safely aligned, Israel can then rely on Egypt to pacify the Palestinians of Gaza on its behalf. Under such a scheme, Cairo will have many ways to teach its new workforce of migrant labourers a lesson.
It can temporarily shut down the infrastructure projects, laying off the workforce, until there is quiet. It can close off the sole Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Sinai. It can shutter the electricity and desalination plants, depriving Gaza of power and clean water.
This way Gaza can be kept under Israel's thumb without Israel sharing any blame. Egypt will become Gaza's visible prison wardens, just as Abbas and his Palestinian Authority have shouldered the burden of serving as jailers in much of the West Bank.
This is Israel's model for Gaza. We may soon find out whether it is shared too by Egypt and the Gulf states.
Jonathan Cook, a British journalist based in Nazareth since 2001, is the author of three books on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He is a past winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His website and blog can be found at: www.jonathan-cook.net
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
Photo: A Palestinian child holds a poster during a protest against the siege on the Gaza Strip, on 6 February, 2018 (AFP)

Video: Kamal Boullata on painting, exile and Jerusalem


 2 July 2018
Palestinian artist Kamal Boullata was born in Jerusalem but has been living in exile for 50 years.
Boullata’s early years in Jerusalem influence his abstract paintings today.
He was mesmerized with “the intricate Arabesque patterns adorning the Dome of the Rock” that he observed in his hometown. Geometry, Arabic calligraphy and natural light later became central pillars in his body of work.
Through his exile, he was able to “freely reflect on Palestine’s spiritual and Arab heritage,” he said, “which goes back hundreds of years, before the country’s fall under the colonial rule of Israel.”
Over the years, he has lived in France, Morocco and Washington, DC, and paid close attention to natural light in each of these places.
He concludes that “perhaps it was the light of Jerusalem that I have been seeking to recapture all along.”
Video by Linda Paganelli

What Mysterious Mass Suicide in Delhi tell us

The family must receive justice, and the haunted soul of survivors appeased. The epitaph in a post modern society cannot be “puja killed us.”

by Susan Visvanathan- 
( July 5, 2018, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) Burari village is in North Delhi, near Model Town 3. Eleven members of a family committed suicide by common consent. They are described as a normal, healthy family, who had danced at the engagement of one of their daughters, aged 33, who was employed with a multinational company. In the transition between town and country, between metropolis and it’s hinterland, the news hits the Delhi citizen with shock. Nithari had a self confessed cannibal but it could have been professional kidney donation mafia. (www.ndtv.com September 14, 2014) Burari looks like suicide, but could have been murder, operationalised by belief in a Godman.
The known norms are not in existence, or if in existence, are not understood or accepted. Anomic suicide is the result. The combination with the type that Emile Durkheim called Altruistic Suicide, results in an individual’s personal interests being subsumed within a larger group, which it identifies with. As a result, in this case, the father of the sons of Narayan Devi, appear in a dream to the younger, and cures him of voicelessness, (which was a result of a work place quarrel,) by prescribing a puja.
NDTC Report


This younger son, ostensibly, becomes a captive of his dreams, and the ‘return of the father’ becomes the apocalyptic space in which the family wants to return. Inspite of the everyday rational world in which they live, running a grocery and a plywood shop, where business is booming and neighbours are friendly, the patriarchal impulse to ‘see the father’ becomes a shared site. The consent to suicidal impulses, (even by the young woman who is to be married in the winter) is so infectious, that no one can negotiate out of it.
The logic of preplanned suicides thus holds good. They had donated their eyes, the bride ‘to be’ discusses wedding shopping, one of the young boys offers to play cricket at 11 pm with a friend. The contradictions of their normal behaviour and the consequences of living in a city where people lead dual lives and perform their duties with a straight face while living in the throes of death (their own, or other peoples’) are only too well known. The dog does not bark, or alert the neighbours, there is no intruder. The Blue Dolphin, in this case a swami whom all the family calls before dying has obviously thrown the chip of his phone away. The food, 10 rotis for 11 people and a dog, is provided to some of them before their death. The house is left immaculately clean.
Their home is a concrete structure, it has no vents for air, so the contractor builds in some pipes on request, which are shaped as symbols of the badh puja, or banyan tree puja. There is an extinction planned, which is an urban legend, in which the whole family is tacitly involved.
The family, by habit, wakes up early, the shop is open at 6 am, and shuts at 11 pm. Everyone loves them, but clearly, in this concrete fort, in the city of Delhi where water and electricity are a problem, they believe by dying they can go to some place better. The distance between their balcony and the concrete structures of their neighbours is a narrow street, yet no one heard the macabre doings where these poor people committed suicides in two shifts. The old mother too was murdered, but the autopsy shows that she too was tacit in death, and the belt which partially strangled her was taken off by someone, the last to leave and also keep front doors open.
Abetment to suicide is murder. The phone company should know what calls transpired between the godman and this benighted family. The family must receive justice, and the haunted soul of survivors appeased. The epitaph in a post modern society cannot be “puja killed us.”
According to the notebooks the younger son left behind for us to read, they believed they would go to a better place, be born again, have a more peaceful life. Every school child is taught, “If I say jump into a well, will you do it?” and they are trained to say “no!” In this case, the family had no such safety catch.
Breathing in 900mg petroleum carbon every day in the air, a house built without air shafts or water vents, and the temperature goes upto 43 degrees C, the symbolic image of the banyan tree, and the badh puja was a contradiction in terms. The banyan tree was the previously the symbol of lineage continuity and of future. In this case, however it became symbolic of tree felling and death. The water table runs out in 10 years, and the 100-year-old trees have been cut in the city. This family short cutted themselves out. We don’t know how, poisoned and strapped up, and cremated with several hundred quintals of mango wood.
(The writer is professor of sociology at Centre for the Study of Social Systems, JNU)
Cambodia introduces its own ‘fake news’ law

 
AMID a crackdown against the media, civil society and political opposition, Cambodia’s government has announced it will roll out new measures to combat what it deems to be “fake news”.

According to the Khmer Times, the country’s Ministries of Interior, Telecommunications and Information on Wednesday announced a new joint-directive aimed at curbing the spread of what Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government considers fake news.
The government has vowed to crackdown against websites and social media profiles allegedly distributing false information. All websites operating in the Kingdom must register with the Ministry of Information or else face additional scrutiny.


“We will start to take measures on Thursday. We have been preparing for a long time, and we have provided ample time for relevant ministries to review,” Ministry of Information spokesperson Phos Sovann was quoted as saying.

Those found guilty of creating or distributing false information could face imprisonment of up to two years and fines of up to US$1000, the Khmer Times reported.

Cambodia’s media has historically been relatively open and diverse, however in the lead-up to this month’s national elections, the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) has targeted independent media outlets.

Hun Sen’s regime shuttered the independent Cambodia Daily newspaper last September, the final headline for which declared the country’s ‘Descent Into Outright Dictatorship’. He has ruled the Southeast Asian nation for more than three decades.

2018-07-04T043311Z_1190585804_RC169D966480_RTRMADP_3_CAMBODIA-POLITICS
Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen smiles during a rally in with garment workers in Kandal province, Cambodia, July 4, 2018. Source: Reuters/Samrang Pring

The Cambodia Daily’s main independent competitor the Phnom Penh Post, meanwhile, was bought in May 2018 by the owner of a Malaysian public relations firm with links to Hun Sen, seeing an exodus of local and foreign journalists opposed to editorial self-censorship.

The Phnom Penh Post reported that on Monday, Hun Sen warned his government were employing technology with which they could hone in on any Facebook user in “only six minutes”.

“Fake news is not good for a real democracy, we want good news for our people,” added Sovan this week as the fake news provisions were introduced.


Cambodia joins its regional neighbour Malaysia in having a law against supposed fake news – the first one of its kind in the world. While introduced under the previous Prime Minister Najib Razak, the incumbent PM Mahathir Mohamad has pledged to overturn the law in the name of free speech.

Singapore has also considered introducing such legislation, however its government said earlier in June that it was in “no rush” to introduce anti-fake news laws.

Last month, a Cambodian man was arrested in Phnom Penh for supposedly sharing fake news about Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, the Bangkok Post reported.