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

Friday, November 2, 2018

Climate change mitigation: A globally-applicable solution


logoSaturday, 3 November 2018

We live in a world which believes in energy at any cost and that includes at any cost to economy and/or environment. Such is our craving for energy. We have gone far too long on this journey that what lies next in this yearning for more and more energy is nothing short of destruction.

But there seems to be no signs of political leaderships of countries across the world to take that firm step of preventing this. Although this is the message given by more knowledgeable personnel at Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), the ignorant I presume that another article on the topic may change this journey towards a climate change determined miserable world.

We want to emphasise that there could be a more prosperous world where we could generate energy for the benefit of the economy and environment.

When IPCC members met at Incheon, South Korea in October 2018, their main pronouncements could be given in three sentences:
  •  Repercussions that were earlier predicted for a 2.00C rise in temperature are now predicted for a 1.50C increase.
  •  Damage to global economy arising from this could be as high as $54 trillion.
  •  While it is technically feasible to mitigate this, there are doubts about political will across the world.
It is these three sentences which prompted me to bring these words to our dear readership today.

What the World Bank Report says

The World Bank has put out a document called ‘South Asia’s Hotspots,’ evaluating what is in store for six South Asian countries Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Outcomes which would befall the six countries have been predicted in terms of reduction in household consumption. It is based on the hypothesis that average household consumption or living standard is a function of temperature in the country.

For Afghanistan and Nepal the optimum temperature is more than current temperature and for Sri Lanka optimum temperature is 24.750C while current temperature is given as 27.50C. See Figure 1. So, any temperature increase due to climate change will result in a reduction in living conditions in 2030 and 2050 depending on two carbon emission pathways.

Accordingly, Sri Lanka will be the worst affected country in South Asia in 2050 experiencing a temperature increase of 1.0-1.50C under climate sensitive scenario and a precipitation variation of ± 3.9% again by 2050. Reduction in consumption arising from this will be 7.0%. Bangladesh comes second in the evaluation with a reduction of 6.7% in consumption under same climate sensitive pathway and by 2050.

Recently German Watch identified Sri Lanka to be 4th most vulnerable country in the world to climate change related risk having jumped 94 slots (from 98th to 04th most vulnerable country) in a couple of years. Bangladesh had also being in this listing in 2010 as we had mentioned in an earlier article (www.ft.lk/columns/No-time-for-different-fuels--we-are-No--4-in-Climate-Risk-Index-listing/4-662593).

While these rankings – World Bank ranking and Climate Risk Index ranking – frightened us tremendously, we wanted to find a way out from these vulnerabilities. Any solution for such vulnerabilities needs to commence with finding out the root cause for vulnerability and World Bank report came to our rescue there.

In their efforts to find possible routes to reduce vulnerabilities of South Asian countries, they evaluated the six countries in respect of six criteria including average road density in km/10km2. In respect of the first five criteria, there was no specific differentiation between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh on one hand and the other four countries on the other hand; but in respect of the sixth, average road density, SL and Bangladesh had a very specific differentiation as could be seen in the figure.  While all other countries had road densities less than 4km/10km2, SL and BD had much higher road densities. In fact, actual data as given in their table no 4.3 shows these average road densities in km/10km2 to be (i) Bangladesh 5.8, (ii) India 1.6, (iii) Pakistan 1.4 and (iv) Sri Lanka 13.5. In my opinion this clearly identifies the reason behind Sri Lanka been the most vulnerable country in South Asia and 4th most vulnerable country in the world.

If somebody has been reading my articles on climate change and related topics consistently s/he would remember my emphasising this road construction to be a key reason behind our enhanced vulnerability, over and over again.

It is no surprise at all

One should not be surprised about this finding. In fact, Prof. Ivar Giaever, Nobel Prize Winner in Physics had pronounced that global warming is basically due to excessive construction of highways. As we have always been saying highway construction involves (a) loss of (i) reflection of solar radiation (ii) conversion of solar energy to chemical energy, (iii) absorption of CO2 from atmosphere, (b) laying an asphalt layer on top of the soil leading to global warming and (c) running of thousands of vehicles powered by internal combustion engines liberating greenhouse gases (GHG) and waste energy on these roadways.

Above statements amply demonstrate the fact that we are in this extremely vulnerable situation due to our having built too many roadways and we are using them excessively using the most energy intensive vehicles.

World Bank’s solutions for Sri Lanka

After this analysis about our vulnerability, WB has identified three development strategies to eliminate our vulnerability to climate change. It has identified effectiveness of recommended action by estimating resulting vulnerability after recommended action is implemented by 2050. Enhancing educational attainment by 30% and improving market access by 3% are projected to reduce impact of climate change on living standards to -2.6% and -2.1% respectively from current projection of -7.0% by 2050.

On the other hand, WB report goes on to predict that “increasing non-agricultural employment by 30% relative to current levels could entirely eliminate the burden of changes in average weather on living standards; the overall impact could shift from -7% to +0.1%”.

I was thoroughly excited by this pronouncement and wanted to identify routes we should take. But unfortunately I was stuck very early by one uncertainty that it was not clear whether the recommended 30% increase should be in (a) number of persons engaged in non-agricultural pursuits or (b) percentage of persons engaged in non-agricultural activities, because we were talking about a change we should bring about by year 2050 and population would also change in the interim.

So, we gave up pursuing on WB recommendations and wish WB to clarify this further. It sounds too precious an improvement to ignore especially when the future is predicted to be as bad as been 4th most vulnerable country on the Planet Earth.

Our own solution – A mitigation solution

In working out a solution, we looked at what we want to achieve from the solution. We noticed that what Sri Lanka needs is a solution which will not only help us by adaptation, but will also mitigate the risks at least partially.

In respect of action against GHG oriented climate change, ‘Sustainable Energy’ by Prof. Jefferson Tester, et al prompts a three-pronged attack via mitigation, reduction and removal. (Please see Figure 2.)

When IPCC decided to carry out a geo-engineering-based action via spraying Sulphur dust from an aeroplane, they were basically trying out a mitigation action. But the action which was estimated to cost as high as $ 1-10 billion per annum did not yield the anticipated result and Prof. Myles Allen of Oxford University has said that “it is completely misleading to say that it is an easy shortcut”.

It is in this context of no other mitigation action been available nor proposed, even globally, that we present our own Sri Lankan mitigation solution which is called highway solarisation defined as “A dedicated infrastructure using solar energy, collected by PV solar panels installed along and above the highways, for the grid or for powering battery electric vehicles”.

If one looks at sketch given for CO2 reduction options (Figure 2), one could see that this addresses the issue via the following routes.
  •  Mitigate – (A) Geo-engineering
  • Reduce – (A) Improved efficiency – (a) Supply-side, (b) Demand side
  •  Reduce – (B) Fuel switching – (a) Lower C/H ratio (b) Renewables – Solar.
So, the only two routes left out are Capture and Remove; there is no CO2 generated to be captured. If quantification is needed this solution removes via mitigation 1.4 kWhrs to be absorbed by the roadway and reemitted as longwave radiation leading to global warming, for every 1kWhr of electricity generated. These arise from generation of electricity and albedo of the solar panels.

Unlike spraying sulphur dust which will be there only when it is sprayed, this solution will be there all the time and it could protect the highway from sunlight and rain water – the biggest culprits of damage to roadways to-day.

If one wants to look at losses on the supply side, one could see that this would reduce those losses by 1.8 kWhrs per every kWhr used in Sri Lanka. The routes in the fuel switching strategy are self-explanatory.  Reduction in CO2 emissions which could be achieved from this will amount to either (i) 0.912 kg of CO2/kWhr if energy generated is used as electricity or (ii) 1.250 kg of CO2/kWhr if energy generated is used for transportation.

So honestly, can there be a better mitigation solution than this and can this reluctance to implement the same be due to it being a truly Sri Lankan solution?

What it could do to the economy
Now that we have evaluated what highway solarisation could do to environment in the context of GHG emission trajectories, we can look at what it would do to the economy of the country. Just as much as it could benefit environment on more than one frontier, it could benefit economy also on more than one frontier. For this we will consider one highway which could be solarised very easily i.e. 96 km extension of the Southern Expressway, being built with a $1.7 billion loan from China Exim Bank at 2% interest with a grace period of five years. We would need about Rs. 5.8 billion a year to pay the interest, at current exchange rates and the toll to be collected may be inadequate, during the first few years of its operation, at least. So, the loan will eternally be in the books of the Central Bank.

You will see umpteen number of economists preaching that building loan funded infrastructure not producing a tradeable product will only increase our foreign debt accounts; but none of them would tell you how to generate tradeable products on such infrastructure.

That is where this highway solarisation comes in handy. It could not only protect the environment from (i) 410kt of CO2 every year if the energy is used for main grid or 562kt of CO2 every year if the energy is used for transportation and (ii) 630 GWhrs/yr of global warming, but it can also settle the entire Chinese loan on the highway in 20 years. It would have taken another seven years before that to recover the investment on solar and the total time required is 27 years. The electricity it could generate, 450GWhrs is also equal to the total energy we expected from upper Kothmale Project of 150MW capacity. (All these details are given in my previous article www.ft.lk/columns/Climate-scientists-cheating-us-to-a---12-b-year-economic-loss-in-2050/4-661185)

I strongly believe that this would demonstrate the power of highway solarisation to mitigate climate change due to fossil fuel usage in Sri Lanka and we still have not addressed the full potential of the solution.

Potential of highway solarisation in Sri Lanka

It was in February 2011 that I submitted a proposal to Minister of Science and Technology seeking Rs. 55 million for a comprehensive feasibility to ascertain how much electricity could be generated by Highway Solarisation and the potential for vehicle electrification. (The Government paid about Rs. 175 million to a British firm to get a feasibility study done for the SOREMPRO Project of the refinery.)

The team included qualified and experienced electrical engineer, chemical engineer (both former presidents of Energy Managers Association), mechanical engineer, civil engineer, financial analyst environmental engineer, IT professional and it was copied to Minister of Environment as well. The Environment Minister took it forward up to drafting a Cabinet paper when suddenly the Minister was swapped with Minister of Petroleum Industries and Minister of Science and Technology was swapped with Minister of Power of Energy.

As for my request, the 60+ page document with separate financial proposal and CVs of consultants came back with a letter from then Chairman of Inventors Commission, Deepal Sooriyaarachchi dated sometime in July 2011 to say that the Commission did not have enough funds for the study. I, of course, was surprised by the fact that the pages of the proposal had not even been turned and they had taken five months to count the money in the kitty to see that it cannot afford Rs. 55 million. Such was how caring the commission had been for Sri Lankan inventors.

Since then I have been keeping count of roads in Sri Lanka which possess appropriate characteristics needed for Highway Solarisation. As I have mentioned in article quoted first, roadways to Jaffna, Mannar, Mullaitivu, etc. do have a lot of potential implementing highway solarisation.

My current estimate, on the minimum side, for potential highway solarisation is about 3,800MWs which would yield about 5,700GWhrs per annum. This matches well with daytime demand for electricity increasing as well and this daytime demand is expected to reach 4726MW in 2030. We also need to remember that efficiencies of photovoltaic solar panels – or output per unit area – is increasing and as we keep on solarising these roadways, output that could be expected from a given area would also increase.

If this quantum of energy is used with vehicle electrification – buses, vans, cars, three wheelers and motorcycles all included – it can eliminate more than 22,000GWhrs of waste energy, 7,100kt of CO2 and 2900kt of newly formed water vapour in addition to another 8,000GWhrs which would lead to global warming. It will also eliminate more than $1.5 billion going out to purchase oil for transportation.

Scientific background of the solution

As we have explained at the International Energy Symposium held on 23 June 2015 in Colombo, this Mitigation Solution is the outcome of a Six Sigma DMADV2 (Define, Measure, Analyse, Design, Verify and Validate) Exercise carried out as per methodologies given in ‘Design for Six Sigma’ by Prof. Howard Gitlow, David M. Levine and Edward A. Popovich. Prof. Gitlow has been extremely impressed by the exercise and has contributed to revise initial workings to make it more comprehensive.

While all the first five stages have been completed and we have requested for a 3.5km stretch on the Sooriyawewa-Mirijjawila Road (Route B562) to carry out the Validation of the solution with a 10MW project and awaiting a final decision.

What such a pilot project of significant dimensions could do to Sri Lanka and other South Asian countries may be beyond comprehension of policy analysts and administrators of Sri Lanka for whom climate change is the juggling of droughts and rains.

Before they could fathom out these differences, real climate change would tip us over beyond the Climate Risk Index No. 1 slot to follow Puerto Rico islet in the Gulf of Mexico area.

Conclusion

While our vulnerability to climate change is been emphasised by both World Bank and Global Watch, there are no signs of any seriousness been attached to their pronouncements.

Here, we have done what a scientist, interested about climate change could do in identifying a mitigation solution and the outcome is far better than the mitigation solution – spraying sulphur dust into the atmosphere – suggested by IPCC.

This solution based on technologies available to-day – PV solar panels, battery electric vehicles, batteries for BEVs, charging auxiliaries – is (a) do-able in the short term, (b) profitable even at present, (c) effective in respect of all aspects and most importantly is also reproducible even in other countries.

Politicians, economists and administrators should not say that Sri Lankan scientists have let down the masses who have funded their education by not showing the way to climate change mitigation; but by not implementing this solution politicians and administrators are letting down the masses who have not only funded their education, but also maintaining them even today.


(Based on a presentation made by the author to Sri Lanka NEXT Forum on 20-10-2018.)

(The writer is Managing Director, Somaratna Consultants Ltd.)

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Living under the poverty line in Gaza


The Electronic Intifada 31 October 2018

The Gaza Strip’s economy is in “free fall” after more than a decade of Israeli siege, The World Bank stated in September.

More than half of Gaza’s two million people live under the poverty line, which the United Nations defines as subsisting on less than about $5 per day, including any aid.

This video shows one such family of seven living in a small metal house in Khan Younis.

“I don’t have a kitchen or anything and I don’t have a decent bathroom,” Samar al-Atrash, the mother of five, told The Electronic Intifada. “We don’t have anything.”

Al-Atrash’s husband, Ismail, has no regular income and cannot provide for the family.

“I bring home two to six dollars to spend on my children,” he said.

“I wish my children could live in a clean house. That’s my life’s wish.”

Video by Ruwaida Amer and Sanad Ltefa.

Meet the French-Palestinian lawyer held by Israel for a year without charge


Following his release, Salah Hamouri speaks with MEE about his situation and Palestinians' broader struggle for freedom

Salah Hamouri upon his return in his home village of Dahyat al-Barid, near Jerusalem after having been released from Israeli prison in September (AFP)

Elodie Farge's picture
For more than four hundred days, Salah Hamouri languished in prison, deprived of his freedom and family, and uncertain when he would ever be let out.
On 30 September, the Franco-Palestinian lawyer was released from Israeli custody after spending 13 months in administrative detention - an Israeli policy largely used against Palestinians to hold them without charges or trial for periods of up to six months, renewable indefinitely.
Hamouri had already been imprisoned by Israel between 2005 and 2011 after being accused of being involved in a Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-led (PFLP) assassination plot targeting right-wing Rabbi Ovadia Yousef - accusations the young man, the son of a Palestinian father from Jerusalem and a French mother, has repeatedly rejected.
In total, more than eight years of 33-year-old Hamouri's life have gone up in smoke.
Hamouri’s wife, Elsa Lefort - who herself was banned from entering Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories in 2016 when she was six months pregnant - slammed Israel’s “relentlessness” vis-a-vis her husband in an interview with Middle East Eye in August (available only in French).
Hamouri’s case has led to intense mobilisation by pro-Palestine activists in France, who have called on the French government to intercede on his behalf.
Translation: Salah Hamouri is free!
Speaking with MEE after his release, Hamouri discussed his detention, the weakness of French diplomacy vis-a-vis Israel, and his determination to remain in Palestine despite Israeli pressure.
Middle East Eye: How were you treated during your imprisonment?
Salah Hamouri: You must know that prison is where the Israelis try to keep us away from our society and family. Detention conditions are the same for all prisoners, and I have not been subjected to any specific treatment because I am French.
Imprisonment in Israel is difficult, especially the collective isolation we experience in prison. Personally, I lived under the same conditions as the other detainees, except that I was not allowed to receive visits from my wife and son because they are prohibited from entering Palestine. It was an additional means of pressure on me.
Are you subjected to any restrictions, or are you totally 'free'?
The day I left prison, [Israeli] intelligence picked me up outside the prison gate and took me to the Moskobieh interrogation centre in Jerusalem. There, I was told that I was not allowed to organise a party to celebrate my release nor to participate in political activities for a month. I also paid a fine of 3,000 shekels [$809] and a bond of 20,000 shekels [$5,393].
I think that for Palestinians, freedom after leaving prison is not complete because Israel keeps us all in a large prison.
How do you feel about your detention today, knowing that no charges have been brought against you?
Prison is already a difficult place for any human being, but it was particularly difficult because Israel also chose to arrest me just at the end of my legal training, only a few days before a trip planned to visit my family in France. Israel targeted me during this particular period of my life to remind me that they are watching me closely.
'For Palestinians, freedom after leaving prison is not complete because Israel keeps us all in a large prison'
There were no charges. For 13 months, I was detained without being accused of anything. My file is kept secret. Neither my lawyers nor I have access to it, only Israeli intelligence services can. I think that this file is clearly empty, but that administrative detention is a means of pressure to force me to leave Palestine.
Translation: Today, Salah Hamouri was able to finalise his registration to the Ramallah bar by taking an oath - after passing the bar three days before his arrest. We send him our most sincere congratulations and wish him success in his career in the service of law and justice!
Do you embody something that Israeli authorities are afraid of?
I think the Israeli occupation harasses the entire Palestinian people, not just me. I am a part of this people, so I am suffering from Israeli persecution. It is true that I feel a particular pressure from Israeli authorities to force me to leave Palestine. I don't know if I'm considered a symbol or not, but I think that their objective is really to drive me into exile, by using my family to pressure me.
Do you think that the French diplomacy contributed to your liberation?
I think that French diplomacy has not done enough. From the moment when it became clear there were no charges against me, France should have banged its fist on the negotiating table.
'I don't know if I'm considered a symbol or not, but I think that their objective is really to drive me into exile, by using my family to pressure me'
France can be a respected power if it gives itself the means to become one. In my opinion, France was too slow to react as far as I am concerned. The efforts and the work finally undertaken should have been done, and vigorously, from the first day of my detention.
Do you hope that the ban on your wife, Elsa Lefort, will soon be lifted so she can join you in Jerusalem?
For Elsa to be able to return to Palestine, French diplomacy must clearly intervene. Only French diplomacy will be able to repeal this ban. The reasons given to keep Elsa away from Palestine are ridiculous. Elsa is not a "danger to Israel's security", but Israel is trying to use my family to make me leave.
If, as it tells us, French diplomacy is convinced that this ban is arbitrary and unfair, then it must do everything to ensure that me and Elsa can be reunited in Jerusalem. This is where we want to live and it is our right. French authorities must have the courage to defend the rights of all French citizens.
Salah Hamouri's wife, Elsa Lefort, has been leading advocacy efforts for his release (Handout)
You have stated that despite the pressures, including forced separation from your wife and son, your choice to remain in Palestine was "irreversible". What motivates you?
I am driven by the force of my convictions. We cannot give up, we cannot comply when the occupation asks us to leave - no, on the contrary, we must stay in Palestine. If every Palestinian who has experienced pressure from the occupier had chosen exile, then there would not be many Palestinians left in Palestine.
Aren't you afraid of being imprisoned again?
The thought of being arrested again has never left me since I was released from prison in 2011. We know that we face this risk in our everyday life in Palestine. The Israeli occupation uses prison to try to put an end to our political mobilisation, so when we are politically engaged, we know the price we have to pay to advance our cause.
 Palestinian prisoners sit during visitation at Gilboa prison in 2006 (AFP)
Are the Palestinians you have met in prison keeping their morale up? Could we see a new collective hunger strike, or is there some disillusionment towards any form of protest from inside the prisons?
Palestinian political prisoners are in good spirits and have hope for their struggle. When we are incarcerated in the jails of the occupier, we have no choice but to stand up and fight the occupation, keeping in mind that despite our suffering, we are moving towards freedom.
The situation inside prisons is influenced by the political situation outside. For prisoners to engage in a collective hunger strike, they need to be accompanied by a favourable political context, otherwise their mobilisation may be in vain.
What are your projects now?
My priority is to reunite with my wife and son and obtain their right to return to Jerusalem so that we can live together. I also want to continue my legal studies in parallel with my work as a lawyer.
- The article is an edited translation of a story that was originally published by Middle East Eye's French website.

Israeli embassy used fake Facebook profiles to spy on students

An Israeli embassy officer spied on student supporters of Palestinian rights, undercover video released exclusively by The Electronic Intifada shows.

Asa Winstanley and Ali Abunimah 30 October 2018

Julia Reifkind wrote reports on boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) activists, which were then sent back to intelligence agencies in Israel.

Her superior at the embassy did this via a classified server designated “Cables” which, Reifkind emphasized, “I don’t have access to because I’m an American.”

The undercover footage also suggests that Reifkind was engaging in deception when she suggested that Palestinian students were behind an anti-Semitic incident on campus the previous year.

The footage is the latest leaked excerpt from from Al Jazeera’s censored film The Lobby – USA, which The Electronic Intifada has viewed in full.

In January 2015, painted swastikas were found on a Jewish frat house at the University of California, Davis. Reifkind was then president of the student group Aggies for Israel, and had yet to be directly employed by the embassy.

Contrary to what she told journalists at the time, in the leaked Al Jazeera footage, Reifkind admits that the racist graffiti had almost certainly not been done by pro-BDS students, but was likely the work of white supremacists from off campus.

Defaming Palestinian rights

The effort to falsely implicate Palestine solidarity activists in the 2015 incident is particularly disturbing in light of the massacre of 11 Jewish worshippers at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh on Saturday.

The gunman arrested after that attack is Robert Bowers, a white supremacist with a history of conspiratorial and virulently anti-Semitic social media postings.

Yet since the attack, leading Israel lobby figures have continued to defame supporters of Palestinian rights as linked to the Pittsburgh massacre, and push for further crackdowns against them.

Meanwhile, members of Israel’s ruling Likud Party have engaged in apologetics and damage control for the American far-right that nurtures the kind of anti-Jewish hate that Bowers expressed.

Talking points used by the party cast blame for the massacre on a “left-wing Jewish group that promoted immigration to the US and worked against Trump” and echoed the gunman’s own anti-Semitic rhetoric.

Days before the 2015 graffiti incident at UC Davis, the student senate had voted in favor of boycotting Israel – a major victory for the BDS movement.

Reifkind had already been accusing the student movement of anti-Semitism, and reacted to the graffiti by drawing media attention.

She and other pro-Israel activists strongly implied in the press that Palestinian and other pro-BDS students had been behind the swastikas – without evidence.

“Random white supremacist”

Reifkind complained that university administrators had refused to blame the swastikas on campus Palestine solidarity activists.

The Jewish Journal reported at the time that Reifkind had “expressed disappointment that school leaders have not drawn a more direct and public ‘connection between the divestment resolution itself and anti-Semitism.’”

AEPi, the Jewish fraternity on whose house the swastikas were found, also blamed the incident on Palestine solidarity activism.

“On campuses throughout North America and Europe, AEPi brothers have been leading the Jewish community and leading the student movement to defend Israel,” the fraternity’s executive director said. “Because of that leadership, in the last few months alone, our brothers have been the targets of anti-Semitic attacks at a dozen universities,” including – he claimed – UC Davis.

On its Facebook page, Reifkind’s group Aggies for Israel posted a photo of the graffiti. The group stated that “AEPi was clearly targeted” due to its “strong track record of championing pro-Israel causes,” including campaigning against the divestment vote at UC Davis.

Aggies for Israel alerted media outlets including BuzzFeed by tagging them in comments.

But in the footage, viewable above, Reifkind admits to Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter “Tony” that “we don’t even know” who did the graffiti.

“We just think it was like some random white supremacist type people who just came, did it and left. We don’t think it was students,” she states.

Marcelle Obeid was then president of the campus group Students For Justice in Palestine at UC Davis.

In the Al Jazeera film – though not in the leaked excerpts – she explains that Reifkind’s false allegations were “hugely damaging” to the group at the very moment they had won a victory for BDS.

Obeid reacts to the undercover footage of Reifkind admitting the graffiti was likely the work of a “random white supremacist” by saying: “That’s very surprising, because it was very clear from their behavior towards us and their attitudes towards us that we had done some heinous crime towards them and we deserved to pay for it.”

Islamophobia

The backlash that Reifkind and other anti-Palestinian activists drove was part of a general atmosphere of Islamophobic coverage of the divestment resolution.

Fox News, for example, claimed that pro-Israel students had been shouted down and “heckled” during the Student Senate vote.

The national media attention on the California campus peaked with former TV star Roseanne Barr tweeting: “I hope all the Jews leave UC Davis” and “then it gets nuked!”

In reality, as video from the night demonstrates, Reifkind was respectfully given ample time to speak at the debate, where she harangued students as being part of a “campus plagued by anti-Semitism.”

She was not heckled or interrupted even as she denounced the BDS movement as “anti-Semitic and hate-promoting.” She and her group then staged a walkout as a way to attract press attention, as they expected to heavily lose the vote.

At the time, in January 2015, Reifkind was a student and campus pro-Israel activist not yet employed by the Israeli embassy in Washington.

But in the clip, she admits to “Tony,” Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter, that as president of Aggies for Israel she had been in touch with the Israeli consulate in San Francisco.

Immediately after she graduated in 2016, her on-campus efforts for Israel paid off, and she was offered a job at the Israeli embassy in Washington. She spoke to “Tony” soon after, in September.

Her official title seen in a business card in the clip was “director of community affairs.” But as she explains to “Tony” in the film, her role mainly entailed “monitoring BDS things and reporting it back” to agencies in Israel.

“Report back” to Israel

Neither Reifkind nor the Israeli embassy in Washington replied to Al Jazeera’s request for comment, and she left her role at the embassy in October 2017.

In the clip above, Reifkind describes her role as “mainly gathering intel, reporting back to Israel.

That’s a lot of what I do. To report back to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Strategic Affairs.”

The strategic affairs ministry is Israel’s semi-covert agency dedicated to fighting a global war on the BDS movement, often utilizing “black-ops.”

It is run by a high-ranking military intelligence officer, Sima Vaknin-Gil, and staffed mostly from the ranks of Israel’s various spy agencies. The names of its operatives are mostly classified.

In the clip above, Reifkind describes to “Tony” how she monitors the activities of Students for Justice in Palestine, using several fake Facebook accounts.

“I follow all the SJP accounts,” she explains. “I have some fake names. My name is Jay Bernard or something. It just sounds like an old white guy, which was the plan. I join all these groups.”

The “intel” she got from such activities was then fed into the classified “Cables” server via her boss at the embassy.

The surveillance seems to have been effective.

SJP president Marcelle Obeid explains in another part of the film that “every single event that I put on, you would have these pro-Israel groups coming out – before our guests even got there – with their cameras videotaping.”

“That behind-the-scenes way”

Reifkind, as the president of Aggies for Israel, received assistance from the Israeli consulate in 2015. In the same manner, she, as part of her role at the Washington embassy, gave pro-Israel groups all over the US “our support, in that behind-the-scenes way.”

This arms-length approach through front organizations is key to how Israel operates in the West.
In 2016, the Israeli embassy in London warned in a cable that the strategic affairs ministry was “operating” British Jewish organizations behind the embassy’s back in a way that could put them in violation of UK law.

It later emerged – from an Al Jazeera film about the Israel lobby in the UK broadcast last year – that the embassy was attempting to “take down” a British minister deemed critical of Israel.

The embassy agent, Shai Masot, was also working through proxies to set up a fake pro-Israel youth organization within the main opposition Labour Party.

In the US, Reifkind was also active with the powerful lobby group AIPAC while she was on campus. In another part of the censored film she explains to “Tony” that “When you’re lobbying on behalf of AIPAC, you never say you’re AIPAC, you say, ‘I am a pro-Israel student from UC Davis.’”

The undercover footage of Reifkind explaining her activities shows how Israel – with total impunity – spies on and disrupts US citizens involved in lawful advocacy for Palestine.

A key Israeli front organization spying on US students is the Israel on Campus Coalition, as The Electronic Intifada revealed in its reporting on a previously leaked clip of The Lobby – USA.

The film indicates that the Israel on Campus Coalition is connected to the anonymous blacklisting site The Canary Mission on behalf of multimillionaire pro-Israel financier and convicted tax evader Adam Millstein.

In undercover footage yet to be leaked, the Israel on Campus Coalition admits to coordinating its covert spying and sabotage campaigns with Israel’s strategic affairs ministry. Like other groups profiled in the film it did not respond to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment.

Al Jazeera’s film raises questions about the nature of Israel’s network of front organizations in the US and to what extent they may be violating the law in acting as undeclared agents for a foreign state.

As Reifkind sums up to Tony in the clip above, “I can’t say anything negative about Bibi [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu] or the government because I definitely work for them. Not directly. I’m just a normal American.”

Did Indonesia’s poor safety standards cause the crash of Lion Air JT610?


By  |  | @ClaraChooi
WHY did Lion Air JT610, operating a near-new Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, crash just 13 minutes after take-off from Jakarta on Monday?
Could the incident have been prevented and the lives of the 189 people on board saved?
Why did Lion Air declare the aircraft airworthy despite complaints by pilots of technical problems, including an issue with “unreliable airspeed”, during its previous flight? Prior to its ill-fated journey from Jakarta to the tin-mining town of Pangkal Pinang on Monday, Flight JT610 flew the Bali-Jakarta route, during which these red flags were raised.
The questions above remain unanswered for now as investigators try to piece together the tragic narrative that has been dominating Indonesian and world headlines this week.
That’s because air disasters aren’t daily events. Neither are they monthly.
Modern air travel has become remarkably safe, safer even than travelling by car or even rail as experts would say. Over the past five years, statistics show that the rate of air disasters involving lives have dropped from one out of every 1.5 million departures (2013) to one out of every 7.5 million (2017).
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Next of kin attempt to identify personal items of loved ones who were on board the ill-fated Lion Air flight JT 610, at a port in Jakarta on Oct 31, 2018. Source: Bay Ismoyo/AFP
But the tragedy involving Lion Air is in the spotlight for a different reason: Indonesian aviation’s chequered past.
It was just in August 2016 that airlines from the archipelago were allowed back into US airspace. Then in June this year, the European Union lifted a similar ban, instituted in 2007.
For Indonesian airline players, the reprieve came as a massive relief – and an opportunity for more business.
With economic development fuelling interest in domestic travel and a surge in foreign visitors to its 17,000 islands, Indonesia’s air travel business has grown impressively. According to World Bank numbers, air traffic jumped from 27 million in 2009 to 88.6 million in 2015 – a 330 percent increase – and these numbers have continued to surge.
For local players, this has triggered a need for more aircraft – according to reports, Indonesian airlines are among the biggest purchasers of new aircraft.
This year, Lion Air alone placed an order for 50 of Boeing’s 737 MAX 10 jets – the same aircraft that crashed Monday. Wall Street Journal reports that the airline ordered over 200 planes from Boeing in a 2011 arrangement that is the aircraft maker’s biggest ever commercial deal to date.
Indonesia is now the world’s fifth largest domestic market after US, China India and Japan, and with its aircraft orders, is expected to contribute some US$30 to US$40 billion to the global economy.
But as air travel demands boom both domestically and internationally, concerns have been raised on the local industry’s ability to find sufficient talent to help it cope with the rapid growth. Industry observers have said the Indonesian government needs and lacks the political will to ensure human safety is the priority of its airline players – not the pursuit of profit margins.
Aviation expert Shukor Yusof says in Aerotime that the government should provide more funds to upgrade airports and to train aviation personnel on the importance of safety.
Separately, International Air Transport Association spokesman Albert Tjoeng is quoted saying:
“The expected market growth, as well as the social and economic benefits, is by no means guaranteed. The infrastructure – both airport and air traffic control – needs to have the capacity to handle the expected growth.
“Having trained personnel to support the expected travel demand is equally important.”
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Graphic showing the tracked flight-path of the Lion Air JT 610 that crashed shortly after take-off Monday. Source: AFP Graphics
But these are words easier said than done. According to the Aerotime report, Indonesia’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation, a regulatory body under the Transport Ministry, is understaffed.
Without manpower, it is unlikely able to provide the kind of granular supervision needed on airlines, training providers, aircraft MRO (maintenance, repair and overhaul), among other matters.
These shortcomings are only worsened by the uncertainty over who, or which agency, shoulders the weight of responsibility in the development of local aviation and adherence to international safety standards.
It is also the possible reason behind the country’s terrible safety record – data from the Aviation Safety Network say over the past 15 years, there were nearly 40 fatal accidents and over 100 incidents recorded in Indonesia.
(See timeline below for a list of Indonesia’s worst air disasters from 1990).