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

Monday, November 5, 2018

Major new Brexit poll shows voters swinging towards Remain

 
 

Bangladesh: The ballad of the tragic commander of 1971

He wanted freedom for Bangladesh and its people. Despite his good intentions, his qualities and character that placed him in his position of power also placed him in a position to die at the hands of some treacherous people.

by Anwar A Khan-
“Humanity has won its battle. Liberty now has a country.” ~ Marquis de Lafayette
( November 4, 2018, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) Tajuddin Ahmad, the lighthouse of our glorious Liberation War of 1971, shall remain a political symbol of Bangladesh for generations after generations. He is the tragic hero of our glorified history. He will remain our tragic hero unto our demise. His is a ballad which is a short story in verse, which is intended to be sung with the accompaniment of music. It is opposite to the Epic, which is a lengthy story in verse and Tajuddin Ahmad could be an epic novel had he been alive for a long time to serve the Bengali nation. He is a popular poem among us. In his only 50 years of age, he was put to death. Had he lived long, he could have changed the course of our history to a marvelous turn…The land he died to save from death and shame trembles and waits, hearing the spring’s great name, and by his pangs, the resolute ghosts are even stirred. We have a duty to remember him with due solemnity.
He was the right man in the right place at the right time. He was a representative of that giant generation during the 1971 war where the older and younger generations … he was a glorious part of that. He was on the truest side of that epical time. During our glorious Liberation War of 1971 with Pakistani military regime, Tajuddin had to create the blueprint for a successful new nation and manage obstacles coming at him from all angles. Whether it was earning the trust of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, handling internal conflicts, earning the confidence of the people of Bangladesh, foreign recognition of Bangladesh, strategic planning of the war, motivating and inspiring freedom fighters, forming the armed wing of the government called ‘Mukti Bahini’ (Liberation Forces) under an united command with the assistance from the Indian army, gathering resources to fight a long battle with a powerful and highly trained enemy. Tajuddin was at the heart of all. He led the war with remarkable diplomacy to finally achieve freedom from the Pakistani colonial occupation.
“Tajuddin’s life events – albeit in minuscule degree of intensity – had trained him to manage this mammoth task. As a forthright young man, he had challenged the anachronistic politics of the aristocratic elite in pre-partition Bengal. Now he would challenge the machinations of a genocidal Pakistan military.” For Tajuddin, confederacies came in the shape of Khandaker Moshtaque Ahmed, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Law, and a group headed by Sheikh Fazlul Haq Moni. Both set aimed to undermine Tajuddin’s leadership and were constant thorn in his life. It was not easy being a prime minister and running the newly formed government. Sheikh Moni claimed that Bangabandhu gave him the order to run a revolutionary force to free the country. When the party was bridled with pettiness within its own domains, Tajuddin was busy uniting a nation. He had to fight against two forces within the government – the opposing, unhappy leaders like Khandakar Mushtaq, and the young, aggressive force of Moni. The intellectual in him was prepared to withstand the challenges his fellow Awami Leaguers were throwing at him.
He came under political assault the moment he took that considered step. He was not, said these angry young men, qualified or empowered to establish a government because he had not been authorised by Bangabandhu to do so. It was an unfased Tajuddin who went ahead with what he saw as his historic mission of bringing Bengalis together. The socialist in him was unwilling to cave in to fate or human machinations. The intellectual in his being was prepared to withstand onslaughts of the kind his fellow Awami Leaguers were throwing his way. He emerged from the experience a sadder man but a necessarily stronger man.
For his part, whether it was his first broadcast to the nation following the formation of the new government on 11 April 1971 or his broadcast on the eve of victory on 8 December 1971, Tajuddin’s spoke mainly the language of peace. He warmly congratulated the unarmed people of Bangladesh for offering heroic resistance to the occupation Army of Pakistan and highly praised the freedom fighters. He also reminded them not to take any aggressive action against innocent people including the non-Bengalis. Many of his colleagues were charged as a roving ambassadors with the unenviable task of reaching out to leaders for international recognition and support at the time or Indians like Golok Majumder, the senior Border Security Force (BSF) officer in West Bengal, have vouched for his capability as a wartime administrator and had openly declared that had anybody else other than Tajuddin had been at helm, Bangladesh may never have won the war as quickly as it did or even achieved independence.
Pakistan authorities projected the war as a battle of Islamic Pakistan versus Bengali miscreants and Indian chancers. For them they were the rightly-guided Muslims hoping to silence the rebellious traitor Bengalis led astray by pagan Indians and save Pakistan in the process. And if this silencing meant killing them then so be it. They were happy and willing to do that freely. The Pakistan military sought the help of a small section of Bengali collaborators to help them in this mission. The task of re-educating these Pakistani attackers and their mango-twigs on the basic fundamentals of Islam which promotes peace upon mankind was left to a clandestine radio channel called “Swadhin Bangla Betar Kendra” (Independent Bengal Broadcasting Centre). The channel sought the advice and guidance of Tajuddin Ahmad who was very knowledgeable on the core principles of Islam.
In a lot of ways his life is a tragic story. He was on top of the Bangladesh’s world. Then everything unravelled — fast, but it did. He definitely has an indelible legacy among his patriot colleagues. That song — his life, so much, but the song — is revered. But as far as the song is concerned, that’s going to be a long, long positive legacy. Who among us can’t sympathize with him? Tajuddin Ahmad is a tragic ballad of Bangladesh’s history. Peppered with lore and the authentic heart of the people in Tajuddin’s classic Ballads, this is an epic book that paints his brave action and his comrades against a landscape of some thuggish characters. His harrowing battle descriptions compete with inimical pert of men shares history and legend like no one else. Both a novel of war and his pure actions, crafted with heart and depth, his life story celebrates one of Appalachia’s finest hours.
Forty three years are on, we still remember him with due honour and he shall remain in our thoughts and prayers unto the civilisation of Bangladesh exists. For him, the pain still is fresh in our minds. He has now come back again. Remembering him just makes us very sad. His patriotism, courage, and experience as a skilled politician helped bolster his chances of becoming the cardinal leader of the Mujibnagar Government in exile to establish Bangladesh in 1971 giving a crushing defeat to the mighty Pakistani military junta. It was the kind of person he was and the intangible qualities that he possessed that led to his position as Prime Minister. Those who spent some time working with Tajuddin and saw what kind of a person he was: not forcing anyone’s hand, only thinking about doing good, how to bring about an independent and sovereign country for us as faster as possible.
He wanted freedom for Bangladesh and its people. Despite his good intentions, his qualities and character that placed him in his position of power also placed him in a position to die at the hands of some treacherous people. Even standing before the point-blank gun shots and bayonet charges on 3 November 1975, he held true to his values and standing stoically in the face of death. He was a man of principles, but unfortunately, it was his principles that led to the death of Bangladesh’s tragic hero, Tajuddin Ahmad. His political acumen and foresight during turbulent times aside, the quieter moments really give us insight into the essence of the man’s soul. He had sworn not to return to family life until the country was liberated to demonstrate solidarity with the men out on the battlefields.
On 16 December 1971 the Pakistan army surrendered to the joint command of the Mukti Bahini and the Indian army. Bangladesh thus emerged as an independent state in less than nine months after the Declaration of Independence. As the principal political figure, Tajuddin Ahmad was surrounded by journalists who asked him about his reaction. He broke into tears and said that he had performed his duty “merely as a midwife” and that he felt “sad” for not being able to “deliver the news of the child’s birth to its father” Sheikh Mujib. Even though the credit for the victory goes to a large extent to Tajuddin Ahmed, he never claimed any recognition for his achievement. He categorically told that nobody other than Bangabondhu should be given any credit for the victory of Bangladesh.
During the political negotiations between Bangabandhu and his team with President Yahya Khan and his team for so-called power transfer during the month of March in 1971, Tajuddin’s meritocracy outshone everybody present there. ZA Bhutto’s right-hand powerful man like Barrister Mahmud Ali Kasuri was filled with wonder or astonishment; and greatly surprised to have found a true combatant in Tajuddin who was able to defeat his rivals by his logic, and reasonable judgment. Even Pakistan’s senior most and highly respected lawyer Barrister AK Brohee was stunned with superior abilities of Tajuddin Ahmad because of his high or superior quality or performance. Tajuddin Ahmad was one of the most sought after political character in Bangladesh’s history.
Tajuddin Ahmad’s life is definitely a page-turner. The closer we get to the end of his story, the faster we need to remember him with adoration. He is like a written work, usually a novel or a story of lassitude or a tragic drama, which is of importance enough to keep us engrossed and wanting to finish it. One can never forget the sadness and lugubriousness of that morning of November 3, 1975. Noted educationist Prof Dr. Khan Sarwar Murshid once said, “Disremembering is equivalent to perfidy.” I was then a college student, but when I still close my eyes, I can clearly remember his handsome and bright face when I took lunch with him sometime towards the end of 1970 just before the national elections of the-then Pakistan at my maternal grandfather’s house at Maison Mia Bari, Kapasia under the Gazipur District. We should commemorate this golden son of Bangladesh every day. Every year, there should be state sponsored memorial services for him and his three other paisanos.
Nations are always their narrations. This is the main reason that compels us to pay certain tribute to the past. Therefore, we have to honour past events, the story itself and most importantly our beloved leaders who accomplished such grand patriotic jobs to establish our own homeland in 1971. This is a way of honouring by the future itself.
-The End-
The writer is a senior citizen of Bangladesh, writes on politics, political and human-centred figures, current and international affairs.

Engraved in the flesh: Desperate Yemenis resort to branding for traumatised children


Unable to afford treatment, many Yemeni families have turned to branding with hot irons as a remedy for war-related psychological illness

A Yemeni child shows the scar left four months after he was branded in an attempt to treat his psychological trauma (MEE)


Monday 5 November 2018 
HODEIDAH, Yemen - Hana Absi was walking back home from school on 14 October when an air strike targeted a motorcycle near her on 7 July Street in Hodeidah.
Shrapnel exploded around the 12-year-old girl. Dead bodies lay around her, the vision seared in her memory. Overcome by the scene, Hana fainted.
"I saw a man and his child covered in blood near the school,” she told Middle East Eye. “Shrapnel nearly killed me. It reached all the way to the fence of the school."
Following the incident, the young girl from the Ghulail neighbourhood of Hodeidah began exhibiting symptoms of psychological trauma, and remained too afraid to go back to school, so close to where she had witnessed the deadly strike.
Walaa Absi, Hana’s mother, felt helpless faced with her daughter’s anguish. Her husband, a teacher in the western port city of Hodeidah, had not been paid in two years, and the family could barely afford to put food on the table - let alone move to a safer area or give Hana access to therapy.
Finally, Walaa said, she felt no choice but to go for “the last resort” - and mark her daughter with a hot iron
Finally, Walaa said, she felt no choice but to go for “the last resort” - and mark her daughter with a hot iron.
An old Arab saying goes: "The last cure is branding." But many needy Yemeni families have turned to branding with an iron in a desperate attempt to cure their children of physical illness and psychological trauma - marking the resurgence of a dangerous folk remedy as proper medical care has become increasingly inaccessible after four years of war.

A desperate measure

Following the air strike, Hana began to suffer from dizziness, insomnia, exhaustion and lack of appetite. At night, the girl lay awake in her bed, fearing that the battles she could hear raging some five kilometres away would soon reach her home.
"I stay up all night listening to the battles,” she said. “I feel they might kill us like the man and his child."
Walaa was desperate to find a solution for Hana.
"I tried to take my daughter to a hospital, but that would have cost me so much and we hardly find food to eat," Walaa told MEE. "After a week, I took my daughter to an old woman to get her branded.
"The old woman heated up a piece of iron until it became red, and then she put it on the belly of my daughter. Hana cried and I felt sinful,” Walaa recounted. "Then the old woman put toothpaste on the burning belly of my daughter to reduce the pain."
Walaa paid the old woman 1,000 Yemeni rials ($1.50), but Hana’s suffering had now become twofold - the psychological wounds left by the air strike, and the new, physical and mental pain of having been branded.
The old woman heated up a piece of iron until it became red, and then she put it on the belly of my daughter. Hana cried and I felt sinful
- Walaa Absi, Yemeni mother from Hodeidah
"I do not believe that branding is a kind of treatment, rather it is another suffering worse than the first, so children forget bad things and think only about the pain of branding," Walaa said.
Walaa soon found out that “dozens” of her neighbours had also put their children through similar treatment - trying to convince themselves that, in the absence of available alternatives, such a method was a good solution to their children’s ills.
After the branding, Hana regained a bit of appetite, began sleeping a little more, and stopped talking about the bloody victims of the air strike - but the deeper roots of her psychological trauma remain.

An ancient practice

Before access to doctors and hospitals became more widespread, branding was common in Yemen, especially in rural areas, where the method was used to treat chronic liver conditions or other diseases.
Umm Mohammed says dozens of people come to her home in Hodeidah every day to get branded - a treatment that, she believes, is more effective than anything else. The woman, who is in her eighties, said she learned the skill from her mother.
"In the past, there were no medicine or hospitals, only branding and there wasn’t a proliferation of diseases like today,” Umm Mohammed told MEE.
The elderly woman has a fire burning all day in her home, a red-hot iron ready for the next visitor. She says she can withstand the shouting and crying of the children, and binds any who try to wriggle free.
A Yemeni child shows the recent brand on his stomach to 'cure' his psychological trauma, covered in toothpaste to help the healing process (MEE)
Branding takes around three minutes each, most often on the back, stomach, or, at times, the head.
"Branding is the cure of all diseases,” Umm Mohammed said. “Each disease requires branding on a specific area in the body.”
She said many people have come to her after hospital visits and other medical treatments failed, and claimed that all recovered after resorting to branding.
Nowadays, more and more Yemenis have come to her over psychological trauma, Umm Mohammed said, for which she prescribes a brand on the stomach.
"The war has left thousands of children - and even adults - suffering from trauma, so I try to help them by branding," she said.
Umm Mohammed said she does not ask for money from the poorest who come to her, only accepting payment from those who offer it.
"I do not take money from needy people. Only those who can pay me 500 or 1,000 rials ($0.75 to $1.50), I take from them to support my family," she said. "I also have family I need to support."

A dangerous choice

Sayaf Noori, eight, is another young Yemeni child who was left psychologically scarred after witnessing fighting in the al-Rabash neighbourhood of Hodeidah in July, when his family fled their home amid fierce clashes.
Since then, Sayaf have been suffering from trauma symptoms including insomnia and loss of appetite, and sometimes sees blood in his urine.
Too poor to take his son to the hospital while trying to support a family of seven children, Sayaf’s father Saleh took him to an old man to brand him.
But Sayaf’s condition has not improved since.
I do not believe that branding is a kind of treatment, rather it is another suffering worse than the first so children forget bad things and think only about the pain of branding
- Walaa Absi, Yemeni mother from Hodeidah
“My son has not recovered until now, and the most dangerous thing is that there is blood in his urine," Saleh told MEE.
"The old man told me to brand my son again in one month if he does not recover from the effects of the fear, and I will do it because I do not have another choice."
Yemeni doctors have denounced the growing popularity of branding, and believe it amounts to neglect from some parents when used as a substitute for specialised care.
"If there is blood in the urine, this means there is something wrong with the kidney or the urinary system of the child,” doctor Mustafa al-Haj told MEE. “He must visit a doctor or this could lead to death."
Walaa, Hana’s mother, stated that she and many other parents resorted to branding because they had no means to access any form of treatment.
"I hope that organisations provide our children with free treatment for psychological trauma and help us to leave towards safe areas," she said.
"I call out to organisations because they are the only ones that can help us nowadays. We have deprived our children of many rights because we live in conflict zones."

Asian MPs tell Bangladesh, Burma to halt ‘poorly thought’ Rohingya return





5th November 2018
ASIAN parliamentarians on Friday said Burma (Myanmar) is not safe enough for hundreds of thousands of minority Rohingya in camps in Bangladesh, calling for the two governments to halt repatriation plans expected to happen this month.
Charles Santiago, head of ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights, which is comprised of elected representatives from countries that are members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), said: “This is a poorly thought-out plan”.
Santiago said Burma must first step up plans on the protection and livelihoods of Rohingya.
The minority group, Santiago said, is living under an apartheid-like system, facing restrictions on their movements, as well as access to healthcare, employment and education.
The UN estimates some 10,000 Rohingya were killed since the Burmese government and security forces, known as the Tatmadaw, began its crackdown on insurgents in August last year in an offensive that saw 390 villages destroyed.
The conflict has also seen about 700,000 Rohingya flee to refugee camps in neighbouring Bangladesh and thousands more escaping to other Southeast Asian countries.
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Rohingya refugees arriving by boat at Shah Parir Dwip on the Bangladesh side of the Naf River after fleeing violence in Myanmar. September 12, 2017. Source: Adib Chowdhury/AFP
“They were still licking their wounds, they are still living in fear,” said Santiago, a Malaysian lawmaker who led a fact-finding mission early this year to refugee camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district.
“We’re not expecting them to go back to live in barracks and as squatters,” he said, as quoted by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Senior Burmese foreign ministry official, Myint Thu, previously said the government was ensuring “a secure environment” for the returnees.
Hundreds of Rohingya refugees and asylums seekers told Human Rights Watch (HRW) they would only go home if Burma guaranteed “security, access to land and livelihoods, freedom of movement, citizenship rights.”
Bill Frelick, the group’s refugee rights director, in statement donors should not support the repatriation plan
“Myanmar’s (Burma’s) government keeps talking about returns, but it has done nothing to allay the Rohingya’s fears of being returned to the same violence and oppression they fled.”

Indian capital under cloud of smog as pollution level jumps


A man crosses a road next to Indian Defence Ministry and Home Ministry buildings on a smoggy morning in New Delhi, India, November 5, 2018. REUTERS/Altaf Hussain

Mayank BhardwajNeha Dasgupta-NOVEMBER 5, 2018

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Air quality in India’s haze-hit north, including the capital, New Delhi, deteriorated sharply on Monday because of unfavorable weather and an increase in smoke from stubble burning in fields across the region.

Levels of PM 2.5, tiny particulate matter that can reach deep into the lungs and cause major health problems, were above 400 in most parts of the capital, and in some places soared above 600.

That is nearly 24 times a recommended level of 25 micrograms per cubic meter on average over a 24-hour period, set by the World Health Organization, which this year said India was home to the world’s 14 most polluted cities.

New Delhi was ranked the sixth most polluted.

After a little improvement on Sunday, when wind picked up, air quality worsened early on Monday, with forecasts of worse to come over the next few days.

“Wind speeds dropped to 15 kilometers per hour from 29 and there’s a significant jump in crop stubble burning in Punjab and Haryana in the past few hours,” Anumita Roychowdhury, an executive director at the Centre for Science and Environment think-tank, said, referring to two states where farmers burn stubble in their fields to prepare for winter planting.

Authorities warn that crop residue burning will peak in the next few days.

Adding to the fears, Indians will celebrate the festival of Diwali on Wednesday, when many members of the majority Hindu community will set off celebratory firecrackers.

The Supreme Court last month allowed the use of “green” firecrackers for Diwali to try to curb pollution, but it was unclear how the rule would be enforced or whether there was such a thing as an environmentally safe firework.

Lower winter temperatures and higher moisture, coupled with lower wind speeds tend to trap pollutants in the atmosphere, said Roychowdhury.

The Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology also said that changes in the speed and direction of the wind, and more stubble burning, had made the air more toxic.

The sale of air purifiers had surged 40 percent from last year because of increasing public awareness about the effects of pollution on health, company and industry officials said.

New Delhi and its satellite cities account for the bulk of air purifier sales but they are picking up in other cities such as Mumbai and Bengaluru.

The air purifier market is dominated by Unilever’s, Blueair, Honeywell International Inc and Britain’s Dyson.

‘I thought it was a miracle. Then I started shaking’: the danger of buying diet pills online

They promise instant results, but put lives at risk. So why is the market booming?
Elaine Gormley: ‘I felt unloved.’ Photograph: Rob Durston for the Guardian



Elaine Gormley was desperate when she turned to slimming pills. She had been obese since childhood, but lost a significant amount of weight by going to Slimming World classes in her early 20s. But by 2012, following a breakup and an operation, the 29-year-old from Belleek in County Fermanagh had gained all 10 stone 6lb of it back. She now weighed 21 stone 5lb.

“I lost my focus. I felt I was unloved,” she says. “A friend said to me that his sister had tried these pills called Dexaprine. She got them on the internet. I said I would give them a go. I heard she was getting massive results.”

Having ordered the pills from Amazon, she started having unpleasant side effects almost immediately. “Within minutes I was beginning to get really, really hot sweats,” she says. “I wasn’t even moving, and the sweat was lashing off me. But at the same time I felt really cold, and my heart was beginning to beat so hard. By the time I got to work, my hands were shaking.”

She tolerated the side effects for three days, weighing herself on the third day. She had lost 8lb. “I thought, ‘This is the miracle that I have been waiting for.’ But then on the fourth day, I took the tablet and my chest started to really ache. I thought I was going to have a heart attack. I had no choice but to stick my fingers down my throat to force myself to be sick – to get the tablet out.”

Gormley told her mother, who threw the pills away. She was lucky. Dexaprine is a potent thermogenic fat-burning dietary supplement, which has since been banned in the UK and the Netherlands. It contains the amphetamine derivative DMAA (1,3-dimethylamylamine), which has been linked to psychiatric disorders, heart attacks and strokes. In 2012, it was implicated in the death of 30-year-old London marathon runner Claire Squires, who collapsed a mile from the finish line. In 2014, Dutch scientists announced that they had found a “cocktail of synthetic stimulants” in the supplement.

When it comes to losing weight, most of us know the only real way to do it is a sustained period of healthy eating and exercise, requiring hard work and patience. But every year, thousands of people buy illegal slimming pills on the internet, enticed by miracle claims of rapid weight loss. One in three slimmers have purchased pills online, according to the joint #FakeMedssurvey by the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) and Slimming World. “You just don’t know what you are putting in your body,” warns Danny Lee-Frost, head of enforcement at the MHRA. Many slimming pills have an amphetamine-like effect, and will increase your heart rate. “If there’s a weakness in your heart, you’re in trouble. If you don’t know about it, you will once you start taking them.”
The desperation to lose weight can cause otherwise sensible people to be reckless: four out of 10 survey respondents said they used slimming pills knowing there were health risks. Others are taken in by slick websites and promises of “natural” ingredients.

This is what happened to Sue Golder, 51, a hairdresser from Hatfield in Hertfordshire. She had been overweight when she was young, later compounded by three pregnancies and a hectic family life, but it was only after she lost her husband that she felt compelled to do something drastic. “Everything I read and saw on TV said obesity was linked to every cancer you could imagine. It frightened me into thinking, ‘You’ve got to do something, you’ve only got yourself here for the kids now,” she says.

“I’d been to my doctors. I had sat in tears and asked for help. They had been helpful, just said, ‘You need to exercise more and eat less,’ but it wasn’t the quick fix that I wanted. I Googled “diet pills”, and loads of sites came up. And the one that I was drawn to showed a doctor with a stethoscope around his neck. I thought, ‘That might be all right.’ I didn’t know that people could set up all these fake websites. I looked through it and there was this questionnaire. It looked official. It was so easy to order them on my credit card.”

Golder took the pills for three weeks before a terrifying episode made her stop. “I was here on my own – the children were all at school. I just felt awful – it came over me like a wave. I thought I was going to be sick. My legs were shaking, I could see all these silver dots flying around my head and I was thinking, ‘Oh my God, I’m going to die. My kids are going to find me dead on the floor.’”

The pills that Golder took were Reductil, which contained the now-prohibited substance sibutramine. In 2010 a large clinical trial, the Sibutramine Cardiovascular Outcomes study, found that the cardiovascular risks of sibutramine outweighed its benefits. Although banned throughout the EU, it is still available widely online, and there have been numerous reports of disturbing side effects. In 2012 an Irish teenager developed ischaemic colitis, a severe swelling of blood vessels supplying the intestines, after taking pills containing the substance.

Sibutramine poses a serious threat, Lee-Frost says. “Reductil was a big blockbuster, sold all over the world. Very popular, and then reports came in of unforeseen incidents. Strokes and heart attacks. Eventually it was pulled. You will still find [sibutramine] on the internet, being churned out. It comes out of factories in China. It shouldn’t be sold – it’s an unlicensed product.”

He explains that, although some pills will openly contain sibutramine – an infamous version coming out of China has a blister pack in the shape of a woman’s hourglass figure and lists sibutramine as an ingredient – others don’t mention it at all. “You have pills, capsules and tablets that say they are natural, safe, herbal. But when we have them analysed they contain more sibutramine than the original withdrawn Reductil did.” Aduki diet pills, which claim to be completely natural, are one dangerous example. More than 28,000 of them were seized in a Manchester raid in 2016.

Josh Hewitt: ‘You see girls saying they suffer from body confidence issues, but as a guy you bottle it in.’ Photograph: Rob Durston for the Guardian

Lee-Frost says Instagram influencers are compounding the problem by promoting their own toned bodies and aspirational lifestyles, and the diet pills to go with them. Instead of glossy magazines, now it is “real people” who are telling us that we all have the potential to look like models (though they all have retouching apps on their phones, and can remove swaths of underarm flab with the swipe of a fingertip).

Women have been subjected to the pressure to conform to the “perfect” body type for decades, but it is increasingly affecting men, too. A university friend of mine, who preferred not to be named, took various internet-bought diet pills along with her boyfriend, who was just as preoccupied with having a slim, toned physique as she was. They both worked at a clothes shop and were recommended them by male models who worked there.

In 2017, 24-year-old Liam Willis died in Swansea after taking diet pills containing 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), which speeds up the metabolism to a dangerously fast level. Two years before, pills containing DNP had been blamed for the death of Eloise Parry, 21, from Shrewsbury. The dealer who sold those pills was later jailed for seven years. The same chemical also killed schoolboy rugby star Chris Mapletoft, 18, in 2013. “This was never about rugby. It was never about sport. I think it was all about the six-pack,” his mother, Lesley, told the BBC after his inquest. “A parent should never have to bury their child, not over something like this.”
Thankfully, Josh Hewitt, 20, from Richhill in County Armagh, stopped taking the pills he bought on eBay before they could do serious harm, but they did have a detrimental effect on his mental health, making him feel paranoid and anxious (some diet pills have been linked to psychotic episodes). They also made him put on weight. The aspiring vlogger points to the role that social networks played in his decision to use them. “There are pressures that come from online,” he says. “People look for likes, and want to look the best for photos.”

Hewitt had always had a weight problem and suffered low self-esteem, but never confided in anyone. “You see girls on TV saying they suffer from body confidence issues, but as a guy you bottle it in. You don’t want someone to think less of you, what you’re going through. It’s a big issue for men.”
***
What can be done to curb the market? Thousands of unlicensed pills are coming into the UK, distributed by people several steps removed from the manufacturers in Asia. Some are Britons paid to “work from home” and sign for the packages of drugs; other distributors are here illegally. Though Lee-Frost compares the crackdown to playing a game of “whack-a-mole”, the MHRA has seized nearly £4m-worth of weight loss pills since April 2013. It works on the basis of referrals from GPs, test purchases, package tracing and tip-offs from Border Force and the Royal Mail. As far as pills containing DNP are concerned, the Food Standards Agency, which is responsible for policing pills that do not claim to be medicines, made only three seizures between December 2014 and August 2017, according to a freedom of information request. The FSA did not respond to the Guardian’s request for comment. The pills remain easy to buy online.

Sunday, November 4, 2018

SRI LANKA: STOP FOREIGN FUNDING TO NGOS,RESCIND THE OISL REPORT & RESOLUTION 30/1 – PRO RAJAPAKSA PROFESSIONALS

Sri Lanka Brief03/11/2018

The National Association of University Academics met the Prime Minister at the Secretariat and forwarded a memorandum with 5 points to be implemented expeditiously.

The Secretary of the Association .Prof Channa Jayasumana presented the recommendations and other academics expressed their views followed by him.

The Prime Minister stated that he would study these recommendations in depth and would intervene to his utmost to implement them.

Around 60 academics representing all Universities in Sri Lanka participated in this discussion.

Senior Lectures r of the Eastern Province Suresh Kannan and Mufisaal Abu Bakar too joined in this discussion. The Prime Minister instructed officials to take relevant steps related to the recommendations forwarded.

The five recommendations included the following
  1. Abandon the Constitutional amendment process that lacked transparency and fraught with deceit.
  2. Expose the reports related to Central Bank Bond scam which resulted in running the economy of the country and punish those responsible after investigation.
  3. Take steps to rescind the UN OISL Report and the resolution 30/1 co-sponsored by the former Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera with no approval from the State.
  4. Protect all national heritages and important archeological sites with no differentiation to regions.
  5. Stop the possibility of NGOs to receive foreign funds directly and to establish a mechanism to monitor their activities.
Reported in Sinhala pro Rajapaksa news site Lankacnews.
Sri Lanka's legitimate Finance Minister explains economic fallout of President's unconstitutional political maneuver

Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera gestures as he speaks to foreign correspondents at his residence in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Feb. 7, 2017.

Mon, Nov 5, 2018, 12:05 am SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.


Lankapage LogoNov 04, Colombo: Mangala Samaraweera, Finance and Mass Media minister of Sri Lanka's former unity government today said the country's economy has been placed in great peril as a result of Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena's unconstitutional political maneuver last month sacking Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

In a statement issued to media today, MP Samaraweera warned that Sri Lanka's economy will collapse into a situation like in Argentina or Venezuela if the country fails to meet its external obligations.

Full text of Mangala Samaraweera's statement (as published in Colombo Telegraph):

As a result of the illegal and unconstitutional coup, led by President Maithripala Sirisena, Sri Lanka's economy has been placed in great peril. The uncertainty created has triggered an immediate negative impact at a time of tremendous fragility in global financial markets.

The first impact was felt in the stock market. Between Monday and Thursday net foreign outflows from the Colombo stock exchange were Rs. 4 billion in just a 4 day period. For the entire 9 months (270 days) from January to September 2018, the total net outflow from the stock market was Rs. 6.1 billion.

Foreigners are selling out rapidly due to a sharp drop in confidence in Sri Lanka's economic management. These outflows are putting major pressure on the Sri Lankan rupee in an already fragile global economy.

The yield on the US$ 1 billion international sovereign bond maturing in January 2019 increased from 5.6% to 9.9% this week - almost doubling in an unprecedented manner. The spike in yield is because global investors are demanding a higher return for the very recently increased risk associated with Sri Lankan debt. This means Sri Lanka's external borrowing costs will almost double.

If Sri Lanka is unable to meet its external obligations we will collapse into a situation like Argentina or worse Venezuela, where similar reckless policies were implemented. It is our citizens that will suffer as a result of this reckless, opportunistic behaviour. In Argentina, a country with similar challenges to Sri Lanka and made key policy errors like what we saw this week, interest rate just reached 74%, inflation is 22%, and the Peso depreciated 115% this year.

As a result of the accelerated foreign sales of Sri Lankan debt and equity, there will be significant pressure on the value of the rupee and will cause domestic interest rates to spike. The selling rate of the SL rupee that had stabilized below 175 spiked from 174 to 177.3 in just 4 days. The old Rajapaksa strategy of selling off our hard earned reserves to try and defend the Rupee has no doubt already been deployed - this has been proved time and again to be a failed strategy. Lost reserves will make it even more difficult to meet our upcoming external debt repayments.

There is already significant upward pressure on domestic interest rates as liquidity had tightened sharply - it is highly probable that the Central Bank will have to increase interest rates in order to withstand the pressure that has developed this week. This will increase costs in borrowing across the board and will stifle investment and economic activity.

Sri Lanka had just managed to turn around our declining exports and stagnating FDI. In 2017 we had our best ever exports and FDI and in the first half of 2018 these figures continued to grow. Unfortunately, the blatantly undemocratic, unconstitutional measures by this illegal regime have put at risk our hard won access to the EU market through the GSP + scheme. If we lose this market we will severely undermine our fishing & seafood sector and apparel sector, which were making strong inroads into the world's largest single market. A return to inward looking, protectionist, regressive policies will put us back on the fast lane to economic crisis.

These negative developments have immediately attracted the attention of global rating agencies. Fitch is quoted as stating "Prolonged political upheaval accompanied by deterioration of policy continuity could undermine investor confidence and make it more challenging for the government to meet its large external financing needs in 2019-2022". Another rating agency Moody's stated "At a time when global financial markets are turbulent, uncertainty about the direction of future policy could have a large and lasting negative impact on international investor confidence"

There is a serious risk that rating agencies will downgrade their Sri Lanka ratings. In addition to the spike in yields on Sri Lankan international sovereign debt, the incoherent policy of this week will make creditors extremely reluctant to lend to Sri Lanka to enable us to refinance our US$ 15 billion debt payments in the next three years. We are at very serious risk of our first ever international default unless the economy is reestablished immediately by reverting to the policy path that our government had carefully put in place.

Sri Lanka's Ministry of Finance and Central Bank had worked hard to build fiscal consolidation and macroeconomic stability in the last 2 years - sacrifices were made in order to ensure we gained the trust and credibility of global financial markets since we have such high external debt obligations between 2019 and 2022. This credibility has been eviscerated in the most irresponsible manner by an illegal regime in just one week.

The range of tax cuts made on Thursday will severely undermine government revenue. In a context where we have Rs. 2 trillion worth of debt service in 2019 and our revenue in 2018 was just touching Rs. 2 trillion - any revenue slippage will be disastrous for the government's ability to meet its financial obligations and to fund public services.

Taking just three of the 15 tax measures proposed - telecommunications levy reduction, VAT threshold increase, and WHT on interest income - the revenue impact would be around Rs. 75 billion (almost double the annual expenditure on Samurdhi). Unless of course by removing the 5% Final Withholding tax they are expecting interest income to be declared as income tax and charged 24% tax instead of 5% applicable at present.

It is not clear as to how this illegal administration expects to reduce government expenditure in order to balance the budget after these erratic, irresponsible, and populist tax cuts. In the first 6 months of 2018, total revenue was Rs. 925 billion. Expenditure on salaries and wages was Rs. 316 billion, interest payments Rs. 391 billion, welfare Rs. 223 billion. These 3 items alone add up to Rs. 930 billion. Will Mahinda Rajapaksa reduce the size of the public service? Will he cut salaries? Perhaps he will reduce pensions?

In fact with the spike in treasury yields as a result of this coup interest expenditure will be far higher than previously estimated. The only other option is drastic cuts to development expenditure which our government was not willing to do. Simply saying that lost revenue will be caught up by "rationalizing cabinet ministers" and "re-examining capital expenditure" is an irresponsible and lazy attempt to deceive the public.

By shelving the fuel pricing formula, the illegal administration is attempting to revert to the opaque, politicized regime of fuel pricing that resulted in the CPC being landed with debt of more than Rs. 350 billion - which is eventually borne by tax payers. There has been a 12% reduction in the Singapore Platts price of refined petrol since October 10th, which would have enabled a reduction in pricing as per the fuel price formula as well.

The irresponsible measures during this week have gone against the basic principles of economic management. These short-term, cheap, populist measures are an attempt to deceive the public to capture political power and avert impending court cases, whilst putting the country risk of major economic peril.


Our government had put in place a carefully thought out, responsible set of programmes to stimulate economic growth and uplift the people. Enterprise Sri Lanka loan schemes have been making great progress in empowering small business and entrepreneurs, Gampereliya has resulted in a major drive to boost economic infrastructure in rural areas. Our pragmatic macroeconomic policies brought inflation under control and in fact food prices declined by 2.3% in October. We did not resort to cheap, short sighted, irresponsible measures like what have been proposed this week. I urge the public to not be fooled by these unsustainable gimmicks and to reject all undemocratic, unconstitutional measures of this illegal regime.