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

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

The constitutional crisis and need for general election 


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By DR. W. D. RODRIGO-December 5, 2018, 8:54 pm

President’s Counsel, Former Principal of Sri Lanka Law College,
President of the ‘Association of Professionals for Sri Lanka’.

The present constitutional crisis in Sri Lanka that originated with the dissolution of Parliament by the President on 9th November 2018 has aroused unprecedented interest of the people. This is a good omen as the Constitution imposes a fundamental duty on every Sri Lankan to uphold and defend the Constitution and the law.

Several fundamental rights applications had been filed in the Supreme Court on 12th of November 2018 seeking inter alia-

a. To quash the orders contained in the Extraordinary Gazette notification bearing number 2096/70 dated Friday 09th November, 2018 which dissolved the Parliament; and

b. Interim relief including a Stay Order against the Respondents from acting in terms of the said Extraordinary Gazette.

After hearing the petitioners, the intervenient petitioners, and the Attorney General, the Supreme Court granted leave to proceed to the Petitioners in all the said fundamental rights applications and issued interim orders operative until 7th December 2018 staying the operation of gazette extraordinary No. 2096/70 dated 9th Nov 2018. The Court also issued an interim order restraining the Respondents and or their servants, subordinates and agents from acting in terms of the said gazette. This second interim order is also operative only until 7th December 2018.

It is important to remember that the interim order of the Supreme Court is only a stay order and not an order quashing the said gazette. Therefore, until such Extraordinary Gazette is nullified/quashed or declared null and void, the said proclamation stands valid. However, the continuation of the proceedings of Parliament in disregard of the stay order undermines the authority and the legal effect of the stay order made by the Supreme Court. In Sri Lanka sovereignty is in the People and is inalienable. Nevertheless, as a representative democracy the exercise of the legislative, executive and judicial power which comprise three of the main components of the People’s sovereignty have been entrusted to the three organs of government.

The three organs of government, namely, the legislature, the executive and the judiciary, must exercise the powers entrusted to them in trust for the People. In the event of any doubt it is the duty of the organ of government concerned to seek a clarification and/or opinion from the Supreme Court, which has the sole and exclusive jurisdiction to interpret the Constitution. The failure on the part of the authorities to do so in the present context amounts to a serious breach of the People’s trust reposed on them and undermining of the People’s sovereignty. This may also have serious consequences. Since this may have adverse effects on the legitimacy of parliamentary proceedings conducted between the date of the interim stay order (13th November 2018) and date of the final decision of the Supreme Court, the true meaning of a stay order must be examined in the light of authorities. In Billimoria vs. Minister of Lands and Land Development & Mahaweli Development reported in 1978-79-80 1 Sri Lanka Law Reports 10 the Supreme Court held that:

"A stay order is an interim order and not one which finally decides the case."

In the same case Neville Samarakoon C. J. held at page 15 that:

"The interests of justice required that a stay order be made as an interim measure. It would not be correct to judge such orders in the same strict manner as a final order. Interim orders by their very nature must depend a great deal on a judge’s opinion as to the necessity for interim action"

Neville Samarakoon C. J.’s view may be substantiated with the decision of the Supreme Court of India in B.P.L. Ltd. And Others vs. R. Sudhakar And Others 2004 Supp (2) SCR 414, where the Court has distinguished between quashing of an order and stay of operation of an order in the following words at Page 5:

"While considering the effect of an interim order staying the operation of the order under challenge, a distinction has to be made between quashing of an order and stay of operation of an order. Quashing of an order results in restoration of the position as it stood on the date of passing of the order which has been quashed. The stay of operation of an order does not, however, lead to such a result. It only means that the order which has been stayed would not be operative from the date of passing of the stay order and it does not mean that the said order has been wiped out from existence."

It appears that the rationale behind his Lordship Neville Samarakoon C. J.’s dictum in the above mentioned case is the necessity to ensure that the final order of the Court would not be rendered nugatory by the conduct and acts of the parties and their servants, subordinates and agents between the time of the interim order and final order.

As the Parliament has been dissolved by proclamation, the interim order staying the operation of the same cannot have the effect of re-summoning/re-convening of the Parliament, which continues to stand dissolved until the nullification or quashing of the said proclamation. The true legal effect of the said interim orders is to stay the operation of gazette extraordinary No. 2096/70 dated 9th Nov 2018 and to restrain the Respondents and their servants, subordinates and agents from acting in terms of the said gazette until 7th December 2018. Consequently neither the President nor the Elections Commissioner can act in disregard of the said interim order of the Supreme Court.

Serious disagreement has sprung between the Legislature and the Executive President as the Parliament continued to meet and conduct its business. These disagreements have caused a political instability in the country. The political instability has distracted foreign investors and investors in the share market. Inability to attract foreign investors and the fall of the share market has had an adverse effect on the national economy of the country, with an adverse effect on every aspect of community life. The Rupee depreciates and the Dollar appreciates to unprecedented levels. This situation has caused serious problems of inflation, unemployment, underemployment and cost of living. More than anything else, people have lost faith and confidence in the Constitution and the democratic system of government.

The failure to give effect to the stay order of the Supreme Court has resulted in the Parliament not being properly constituted. This situation has an adverse impact on the basic structure of the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka relating to the sovereignty of the People, particularly the legislative sovereignty of the People as declared in Articles 3 and 4 (a) of the Constitution.

In the circumstances the rights of the People of Sri Lanka to exercise the legislative sovereignty through a validly constituted Parliament would be violated contravening Articles 3 and 4 (a) of the Constitution. This would deprive the People of Sri Lanka of their right to equal protection of the law guaranteed by Article 12 (1) of the Constitution. In the circumstances the fundamental rights of the citizens of Sri Lanka to equal protection of the law guaranteed by Article 12 (1) have been violated and will continue to be violated.

In Faiz vs. Attorney General and Others reported in [1995] 1 Sri L. R. 372 Perera J. stated at 404:

"It is clear that Article 126(4) gives this Court very wide powers in this regard. I am of the view that responsibility under Article 126 would extend to any respondent who has no executive status but is proved to be guilty of impropriety, connivance or any such similar conduct with the executive in the wrongful acts violative of fundamental rights".

Judging from the aggressive manner in which Parliamentary proceedings are conducted it appears that the Parliament is unlikely to be able to sort out this Constitutional issue within the Parliament. Hence the most appropriate solution is to seek a fresh mandate at a general election from the People who have the sovereign power of this country.

We need volunteers as our politicians


2018-12-06

How self-centred or other-centred are we? This being the principle virtue of our character, one of the main ways to measure or recognise it is our critical role as volunteers or first responders in emergencies and crises. Do we think of self-survival and run away from it or do we have the courage to take a risk and run into the situation with the intention of rescuing or helping someone or doing whatever possible?

The Good Samaritan parable being one of the most powerful and important examples, the exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader the Dalai Lama has also said that the intelligent way to be selfish is to work for the welfare of others. The civil rights crusader Martin Luther King, Jr. has challenged the world by saying life’s most persistent and urgent question is, “What are you doing for others?”

Two of the greatest figures of modern times have also given us gems on volunteerism or being first responders in a crisis or emergency. India’s legendary visionary Mahatma Gandhi has said the best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others while one of the world’s greatest scientists Albert Einstein has said only a life lived for others is worth living. He may have meant this is more powerful than splitting the atom.

These reflections and thoughts for contemplation came to mind as the United Nations marked the International Volunteer Day.

The UN General Secretary António Guterres in a statement says, the diverse and dynamic role of volunteerism in promoting the Sustainable Development Goals merits strong support from Governments and other stakeholders. On this International Day, he has thanked volunteers for their efforts to leave no one behind.

According to the UN, International Volunteer Day (IVD) mandated by the UN General Assembly, is held each year on December 5. It is viewed as a rare chance for volunteers and organizations to celebrate their efforts, to share their values, and to promote their work among their communities, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), UN agencies, government authorities and the private sector.

Apart from mobilising thousands of volunteers every year, the UN Volunteers (UNV) programme contributes to peace and development by advocating the recognition of volunteers and working with partners to integrate volunteerism into development programming.

This year’s theme is ‘volunteers build resilient communities’.

This year, IVD celebrates volunteer efforts that strengthen local ownership and the resilience of the community in the face of natural disasters, economic stresses and political shocks. Every year, more than 6,500 UN Volunteers serve with UN entities in some of the most challenging environments across the world, and 12,000 UN Online Volunteers complete more than 20,000 assignments online through the UNV Online Volunteering service.

Sri Lanka today is suffering from a political shock and economic stress in the aftermath of the worst political turmoil since independence. President Maithripala Sirisena’s decision on October 26 has left Sri Lanka in a crisis where some say we have two governments or two Prime Ministers while others say we have no government, no prime minister and no Cabinet. Social media has portrayed the President as the government today while the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal are due to give important verdicts in the coming days.

With many politicians now being seen as market place commodities if not something worse, this is the time for volunteer impartial groups and emergency first responders to come forward courageously and inspire civil society in determining the course of affairs which could change the history of Sri Lanka. 

Sri Lanka’s “Chief Servant”- He Has To Go! 


Sharmini Serasinghe
logoWhen Maithripala Sirisena addressed the nation in 2015 after being sworn in as the Executive President of Sri Lanka with 6.25 million of us having voted for the man – a political nonentity – we did so with the sole purpose of getting rid of his megalomaniacal predecessor, Mahinda Rajapaksa and his corrupt-to-the-core regime, he said, “This country needs a Chief Servant (himself) and not a King (his predecessor)”.
Well, look what our “Chief Servant”, Sirisena has done! 
He did a volte-face on his fancy utterances, donned the crown, elevated himself to the status of a dictatorial king, forgot all about being our “Chief Servant”, stabbed us all in our backs and continues to call the shots.
What a disastrous “Chief Servant” he has proved to be! The man should be reminded that he is STILL an ’employee/servant’ of ours – the citizens of Sri Lanka – his ’employers’, who pay his salary and foot the bills for all the perks and luxuries he and his family enjoy.  
Instead of keeping our ‘house’ in order, he has crapped on it, and on our Constitution and stabbed us in our backs – his employers – who gave him the job by voting for him, by stealthily bringing through the backdoor the enemy, the very lowlifes we wanted to be rid of – the treacherous Rajapaksas and their cohorts – kicked aside the legitimate Prime Minster and government and installed the hijackers of our Parliament as our Prime Minister and Cabinet of Ministers. Who the hell gave him the authority to do that!
How does one respect this traitor and continue to regard him as the President of our country? I definitely do not!
‘Breach of Trust’ is a criminal offence and our self-proclaimed “Chief Servant”, Maithripala Sirisena is guilty of it! It is sine qua non that we be rid of him without further ado, before he causes further irreparable damage. The time has come for us to join hands and request him to quit with dignity or else, we have no option but twist his arm into doing so before he burns our ‘house’ down to cinders. Period!
The cost of damage he has caused by his political drama must eventually be borne by the 21 million of us Sri Lankans and our future generations, not just the 6.25 million who voted him in.
Besides the economic hardships we the citizens of Sri Lanka will eventually be forced to endure, he has also brought shame upon our country which was once regarded as the epitome of a Democratic country – a country which upheld all what Democracy stood for – but not anymore. We have today become the laughing stock of the world, thanks to our “Chief Servants” unforgivable treachery!
Sri Lanka is said to have the highest literacy rate in the South Asian region at 92% and overall, one of the highest in Asia. Literacy is not confined merely to the ability to read and write. Any fool can do that. Literacy also means integrity, courtesy, the ability to use one’s common sense and sound judgement to determine right from wrong, the lack of which has been proven over and over again by the gullible voting masses of this country. Literacy also means not allowing others with personal agendas viz. politicians to brainwash us into believing what they want us to believe for their own selfish ends, the lack of which, once again, has been proven over and over again by the gullible voting masses of this country.
Democracy is an institute each and every citizen of our country is duty bound to respect, and uphold, no matter who or what we are. We Sri Lankans have the moral right to live with dignity in our own country. This is our democratic right. It is our birth right. But, how many amongst our voting masses care two hoots for such rights or do they even know what they are? So much for a population with a 92% literacy rate!  
When self-serving treacherous politicians behave and regard our country as their personal backyard to do whatever they wish with it at will, with not a care for those of us who voted them into power, it becomes a problem of unimaginable proportions not only for us but for the future generations of Sri Lankans as well. By selfishly looking the other way at this crucial moment in time, we Sri Lankans are also creating an ugly legacy for our future generations. Is that what we want to leave for our children and grandchildren? Do we want them to curse us for being selfish, spineless, complacent cowards when our country needed us? Is that how we want them to remember us?
The worst is yet to come. If we the people of this country don’t unite and halt the chaos that undoubtedly will unfold before our very eyes it will be too late to halt it. 
Let not our self-serving politicians cast us aside as non-entities who matter only at the ballot. As citizens of Sri Lanka, we matter and our rights matter when it comes to defending our country against such traitors. As citizens of Sri Lanka, we also have every right to live in our motherland with dignity, in peace and in harmony with each other.

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No deterioration in lanka’s macro economic conditions – CB Governor


Ananda Kannangara-Thursday, December 6, 2018

Although the political instability currently prevailing in the country has been a major destruction to the on- going economy development activities, there are signs that the much needed political stability is likely be restored very soon.

Central Bank, Governor Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy told the 54 th Annual Report Awards ceremony, organised by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) in Colombo.
Coomaraswamy highlighted that this situation is manageable, but two international rating agencies have currently downgraded Sri Lanka.

“There is no doubt that these challenges and the country‘s situation are still manageable,” Quoting examples from certain foreign countries, Dr. Coomaraswamy said that under whatever political situation, Sri Lankan people still respect democracy.

With regards to the macro economic framework, the Central Bank Governor said there has been no deterioration in the country’s macro economic conditions.

Dr. Coomaraswamy also highlighted the importance of Annual Reports of companies and said the purpose of a good Annual Report is to provide a clear understanding to the reader not only the financial results of an organization but also its value, achievements and the contributions a company made to the society.

He said the quality of annual reports are extremely important and the quality of all these annual reports have improved to a greater extent.

Chairman of the Annual Report Awards Committee, Heshana Kuruppu said this is the 54th Annual Reports Awards ceremony and the objective of holding the ceremony is to commemorate the achievements of corporate reporting.

He said this annual event truly showcases the commitment from corporate towards the maintenance of very high reporting standards and transparency. He further highlighted that according to the Harvard Business Review research, there is a direct link between stakeholder engagement and market value of a company.

He further said the importance of this competition has been highlighted by the consistent growth it has witnessed year after year. This year too there were over 130 companies participating under 22 different sectors. 

Money printing passes Rs 150 B


PANEETHA AMERESEKERE- DEC 05 2018

Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) lent Rs 15,339 million to the Government today (5) to fill in a revenue gap, thereby increasing GoSL’s money printing (MP) liabilities by 11.37% to Rs 150,275.95 million.

Since the advent of the political crisis on 26 October, the Government’s Money Printing liabilities have increased by 71.84% (Rs 62,826.35 million) thereby fuelling inflationary pressure and increasing Government debt.

In related developments, stock market net foreign outflows (NFOs) due to this crisis amounted to Rs 241,812,612 million today, taking NFOs in the calendar year to date to Rs 18,757.03 million and since 26 October to Rs 9,258.46 million, constituting 49.36% of such NFOs in the calendar year to date, recorded in the space of a mere 40 days. Such NFOs are met from the country’s foreign reserves to prevent depreciative pressure on the rupee as Sri Lanka is an import dependent economy.

But despite such a protection, the benchmark ‘spot rupee’ fell by 10 cents to Rs 179.00/30 to the US Dollar in two way today, a sharp fall of between  Rs 6.10-6.30 (3.53-3.64%) since the crisis, and nearly double that of the  market exchange rate’s fall for the totality of last year which was between a mere  Rs 3.25-3.35 (2.16-2.23%).

Further, due to this rupee protection, the country’s foreign reserves in the first 21 days of last month alone fell by US$ 700 million, official records showed. The depreciation of the country’s foreign reserves for the totality of last month would only be known at the latest by next Friday (14 December) in CBSL’s ‘Weekly Economic Indicators’ data. CBSL since March 2015 has been releasing such information by the second Friday of the following month at the very latest.

Implementing climate change mitigation from next year



Sri Lanka is the fourth most vulnerable country and USA is the 10th most vulnerable country out of a total of about 160 countries in the world as per Climate Risk Index published by German Watch. Different parts of the two countries experience different types of extreme weather at a given time – Pix by Shehan Gunasekara

logo Thursday, 6 December 2018

UNFCCC has had 20+ conventions with Sri Lanka’s participation and we are (i) fourth most vulnerable country to Climate Change in the world as per German Watch’s Climate Risk Index Ratings, 2018 and (ii) most vulnerable country in South Asia according to World Bank’s Report ‘South Asia’s Hotspots’ of September2018.

Greenhouse Gas emissions has not decreased; but has continually increased during these 20+ years and UNFCCC and IPCC are now directing their efforts towards identifying ways and means of nullifying effect of doubling of CO2 concentration on mankind. This endeavour is called Geo-engineering (GE).

In October 2017 some world scientists met in Berlin to discuss future of GE and a subcommittee of US House of Representatives met in November2017 to discuss the same and discussions were predominantly in respect of Solar Radiation Management (SRM) which is a part of GE.

According to the publication ‘Geoengineering the Climate’ by the Royal Society, GE aims to “intervene in the climate system by deliberately modifying the Earth’s energy balance to reduce increases of temperature and eventually stabilise temperature at a lower level than would otherwise be attained”.

According to this publication, GE can be classified into two main groups (a) Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) and Solar Radiation Management (SRM).SRM does not plan to reduce GHGs, but only to buy time to let our descendants or heirs to find the solution for us, address it later and pay for it, if only, they also don’t want to keep it for their descendants.


Need of the hour for Sri Lanka

What we need for Sri Lanka to-day is a mitigation strategy which could be implemented fast, very, very fast. For 20+ years we had been waiting anxiously for UNFCCC and IPCC to provide us with a solution. But to-day, these organisations prompt interested parties – academicians, research organisation, energy administrators – to look at GE and identify a solution which will keep the atmosphere cool, even if CO2 concentration reaches 560ppm.

Out of such SRMs suggested and promoted by academicians of different universities, (a) Stratospheric aerosols, (b) Space reflectors, (c) Marine cloud brightening, (d) Oceanic mirrors, (e) Enhancing albedo of buildings and leaves are some of the better known and more discussed strategies. While stratospheric aerosols and space mirrors are expected to be implemented in stratosphere or above the troposphere, marine cloud brightening would be implemented in the clouds area in the atmosphere, and oceanic mirrors and surface albedo initiatives is meant for earth’s surface level.

When the Royal Society evaluated these different SRM Strategies on four criteria (i) Effectiveness, (ii) Affordability, (iii) Timeliness and (iv) Safety, Stratospheric Aerosols – i.e. spraying aerosol forming material like an oxide of sulphur into the stratosphere – scored 4 each (out of a total of 5) for first three criteria and it scored only a poor 2 in respect of safety.

Major objections to its safety were (a) need for adherence to international conventions on land and sea area usage, (b) ability to carry out a forced termination, (c) consequences of such a forced termination i.e. the unbearable enhanced global temperatures and (d) consequences of a natural volcanic eruption occurring while this been implemented.


What is available for Sri Lanka?

One needs to ask from all those who attend or attended IPCC or UNFCCC conventions what they have brought from those conventions which will help us to (i) face being fourth most vulnerable country in the world and (ii) reduce our vulnerability.

In today’s context, all what they could say will be, of course, wait till we finalise the most effective SRM technique.

So, shall we look at our own indigenous SRM technique, Highway Solarisation (HS) which is defined as a dedicated infrastructure for powering Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) or the grid, using solar energy collected by laying PV solar panels along and above the highways?

The definition of SRM has a few key characteristics as follows: (a) method should reduce net incoming shortwave solar radiation received(b) deflect sunlight and/or (c) increase albedo of the atmosphere, clouds or earth’s surface.

Highway Solarisation (HS): (a) reduces net incoming shortwave solar radiation received by the highway – the man-made surface on the earth – and (b) deflects sunlight without allowing it to impinge on the earth’s surface. While tarred surface would have absorbed 88-92% of incident solar radiation, the solar roof on the highway would convert 17% of incident solar radiation into electricity, reflect about 10% solar radiation and would absorb only 73% of solar radiation. So, there is a direct reduction of at least 17% in the absorbed solar radiation.

On the other hand, if this 17% energy converted to electricity is used for transportation via BEVs replacing Internal Combustion Engine powered automobiles, it would eliminate, 68% of waste energy emitted to the atmosphere by the ICE powered automobile. Even if it is used for providing electricity to grid, at least an additional 25% would be eliminated. So, the moment this waste energy component is also taken into consideration, the total benefit from HS will be anything from 42% to85% of incident solar radiation on the area covered by HS.


Other advantages of Highway Solarisation

From the view point of needs of SRM, HS has some significant advantages. SRM talks about increasing albedo of earthly surfaces; but does not talk about the ever-decreasing side of albedo. Earth’s albedo is eternally decreasing mainly due to the construction of roadways.

So, if we adopt HS as SRM solution for climate change, then we can ensure reduction of damage (i.e. loss of albedo) due to highway construction by ensuring that all new roadways are planned and built with HS. This would imply that when we build a roadway, we also bring energy for transportation as well. So, eliminating albedo reduction due to highway construction may be equally or even more important as enhancing albedo.


Some practical experiences

Three practical experiences come to our mind in respect of benefits from HS, all three in 2018.

1. It was in early January2018, Hume Highway in Australia had a 10 km stretch melted and the road was closed for a few weeks. It indicates the very low level of albedo of a highway. If the highway had been solarised, this would not have happened.

2. California experienced the worst patch of wild fires in the past few weeks followed by unprecedented rains thereafter. We believe that both these could be related to (a) the volcanic eruption in Hawaii and (b) very high levels of roadways in California. California has the second highest extent of roadways in USA, at 394,608 lane miles next to 675,580 lane miles in Texas. The air circulation model – Walkers Circulation – would show us how air currents from Hawaii at 155.58280W would move towards California at 119.41790W and there is a possibility that both these– fires as well as enhanced precipitation –have resulted from the same origin. Does it mean that what could be expected from stratospheric aerosols would vary with location depending on air circulation models?

3.World Bank in its report ‘Hotspots in South Asia’ declared that Sri Lanka and Bangladesh are the most vulnerable countries in South Asia and out of a few characteristics the Bank has considered in the report preparation, only characteristic which clearly differentiated these two countries were their high road densities – Sri Lanka at 13.5km/10km2 and Bangladesh at 5.8km/10km2.

These examples from three locations in the two hemispheres at different coordinates do indicate the damage highway construction could do to a country. It is in this context, that we propose our Highway Solarisation as a solution for climate change and our objective is not to frighten people away from highway construction but to show how HS could (a) reduce highways absorbing solar radiation and then emitting as long wave radiation, (b) generate electricity either for the grid or for BEVs, (c) generate energy without generating CO2 and (d) restrict loss of albedo of the earth’s surface due to Highway construction, etc.


Comparison of different SRM strategies

Now that we have looked at SRM strategies in general, and HS in particular, we can look at how HS matches and compares with these other SRM strategies. We will again be guided by the pronouncements of the Royal Society.


a. Effectiveness

Effectiveness is combination of (i) scientific and technological basis, (ii) technological feasibility (iii) magnitude of spatial scale and (iv) uniformity of the effect achievable.

Scientific and technological basis of PV solar panels usage as a method to provide renewable energy is well established.

HS is technologically feasible. But magnitude of spatial scale possible and uniformity of the effect achievable depend on the match between HS and energy uses to-day.

If one looks at HS purely as SRM technology, what it could achieve is only a meagre 0.14% land area coverage, not enhancing its albedo, but reducing absorption by 17% which will yield an overall weightage factor of only 0.2% compared with the desired requirement of enhancement of albedo to 1 on 10% of the land area.

But to compensate for this deficiency, 25 million km of roadways on the top 10 countries in the world could yield the entire energy requirement for electricity and transport sectors of the world – i.e. 25,551TWhrs of electricity and 6,048TWhrs of energy for transportation, the balance 24,192TWhrs of energy used by transportation in 2017had just been added to the atmosphere as waste energy heating up the globe. So, HS has the required magnitude and will also eliminate about 75,000 TWhrs of waste heat emitted by the electricity generation and transport sectors every year.

In respect of spatial scale again, HS provides superior match in the sense HS Provides higher levels of mitigation where it is needed the most. Wherever there is more energy been used for transport with wider roads and more energy been wasted, it will eliminate these to its full potential extent. In respect of uniformity, there may not be the perfect match as the solar irradiance that could be captured varies with the latitude of the locations, and, may be, even with the orientation of the roadways to N-S direction.

So, we could state with absolute certainty that HS has a much, much better effectiveness than all those SRM techniques considered up to now.

b. Timeliness

This parameter evaluates the State of Readiness for implementation and the speed with which the intended effect on climate change would occur.

HS is ready for implementation from day one, provided governments could provide the relevant approvals. Even the approval processes are straight forward as it will be put upon built up property. The effect on bothCO2 reduction as well as on albedo on the earth’s surface will be immediate.

The full implementation with about 25 million km of highways been covered with PV Solar panels to be completed in 38 years – the time it would take for CO2 concentration to increase from 410ppm to 560ppm at the rate of 4ppm per year – will depend on the availability of about 716GW of PV solar panels a year. Last year’s output was about 100GW.

So, we need to devote all our manufactured PV solar panels for HS if we are to achieve the resolution of climate change the way it happens with it.

If a PV solar panel that had been manufactured is to be used for climate change mitigation definitely and effectively, the same shall be used for HS.

c. Safety

Safety implies (i) predictability, verifiability of the intended effects, (ii) absence of adverse side effects and environmental impacts and (iii) low potential for things to go wrong on a large scale. Only side effects that one could think about is what happens if a vehicle collides with a column of the structure to which the panels are fixed. These columns could be provided with guard rails around them. On the other hand, most road vehicular accidents (about 75%) do occur due to wet surfaces from rain, snow or otherwise and with HS this tendency would be much less.

Excepting this, there are no other possible opportunities for things to go wrong.

d. Cost

What needs to be considered is the cost of both deployment and operation. This is where this strategy scores very high as it is completely self-sustaining.

The total cost of the project could be easily recovered in less than 10 years and the returns thereafter could be invested in more HS projects.

As such it could be seen that HS scores very high on all the four parameters generally used in evaluating SRM projects and it is unlikely that a better SRM would be identified for such early implementation.


Climate change mitigation shall enter implementation phase

During the first decade of this century, UNFCCC and IPCC were researching mostly about alternatives for energy to be used in transportation and electricity generation. Transportation research involved identification of a suitable alternative vehicle and a fuel to match the same. Most researches led to Battery Electric Vehicle as the preferred vehicle and once that decision was made the remaining research converged to one of finding alternative ways of generating electricity.

It is in this back-ground Ban Ki Moon, former UN Secretary General announced in September 2014 that (i) at least 30% new vehicle sales in cities in 2030 should be BEVs, (ii) they should be powered by renewable energy and (iii) deforestation should be reduced to 50% by 2030 and to 0% by 2050.This is what HS specifies.

Four years after Ban Ki Moon gave these guide lines and nine years after the Royal Society published its document on ‘Geoengineering the Climate,’ the climate system has only become worse as per IPCC’s latest announcements in Incheon, South Korea and USA’s fourth Climate Assessment Report put out on Black Friday.

Sri Lanka is the fourth most vulnerable country and USA is the 10th most vulnerable country out of a total of about 160 countries in the world as per Climate Risk Index published by German Watch. Different parts of the two countries experience different types of extreme weather at a given time.

Oil companies and reinsurers should take the lead and move mankind away from this oil-based economy towards a renewable energy based economy and there are adequate returns in it.

Oil companies will lose their monopoly of energising global mobility if they don’t invest in HS and as such should start investing in HS. On the other hand, re-insurers are the people who will ultimately bear the cost of destruction arising from disasters of whatever nature and therefore should invest in HS. But unfortunately, oil companies earn money from fossil fuels and if there is no risk and no vulnerability, people will not be interested in insurance. For reinsurers to be interested in climate change mitigation, the level of destruction should be so great that the premiums to be charged should make businesses unprofitable.

For one split second, we have taken our eyes away from the need for CO2 reductions. We have been duped by the Paris Accord and bringing in more natural gas to the energy mix and we have lost all our attention on GHG reductions. The world changed during that split second to a craving for SRMs – such grandiose plans, thoroughly unfounded– postponing the real issues of reducing GHGs and passing it on to those innocent infants of today and tomorrow, if they survive the barrage of droughts, cyclones, snow storms, floods, wild fires, whatever. No, let us not pass this on. Let us solve climate change forever.


Conclusion

Climate change can be solved by investing $ 1,074 billion per year and solarising about 550,000km of roadways in the world every year. The 10 top countries do have 25,000,000 km of roadways. We will need about 700GW of solar panels. To utilise about20% of the electricity generated in the process, the world will need about 60 million Battery Electric Vehicles to be manufactured every year.

Both these are possible in view of the estimates or targets mentioned in UNEP’s document ‘Green Economy’ published in June2011.This report, which contained contributions from not only the climate scientist fraternity, but also from the top rungs of the financial management establishments like Bloomberg, Deloitte, PWC, E &Y, etc. predicted that the world will have to spend about $ 1.4 trillion/year to get over the travails of climate change.

It further specified what world will have to spend for energy projects and for transport projects and also predicted that if we start investing about 0.34% of a country’s GDP on alternative vehicles, we could bring about 80% penetration within 40 years and have 10% additional employment. These estimates match well with HS and the objectives we could set for ourselves.

So, our solution for climate change matches very well with the UNEP document developed in 2011 with contributions from the best financial brains available then.

Our resolve to-day on this would decide between whether we and our grandchildren survive climate change or perish due to it.

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

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Video: Israeli soldiers shoot Palestinian from behind

Mourners carry the body of Muhammad Habali during his funeral in Tulkarm, occupied West Bank, after the 22-year-old was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers during a raid on the city on 4 December.Shadi Jarar’ahAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy 4 December 2018


Israeli occupation forces shot and killed a Palestinian man during a raid on the West Bank city of Tulkarm on Tuesday.
The Israeli military claimed that its forces opened fire during “a violent riot … in which dozens of Palestinians hurled rocks.”
However security camera footage appears to show that Muhammad Habali, 22, was shot while he was walking away from the direction of the soldiers’ fire and posed no conceivable threat to anyone:



The short clip shows men standing around in a street and walking away and occasionally looking around their shoulders and gesturing, presumably at Israeli soldiers.
 
A man carrying a thin pole, like a broomstick, walks in the same direction as the rest of the men, but more slowly. The video shows him falling forward onto the street, presumably after he has been shot from behind.
 
Palestinian health officials told media that Habali was shot in the head.
 

The video shows that Habali and the other men were walking away from the apparent source of the gunfire, contradicting the Israeli military’s statement that soldiers opened fire in the context of “riots.”
The video shows local people evacuating Habali in an ambulance, after assuring themselves that Israeli soldiers had left the area and it was safe to approach him.
Area residents told the Bethlehem-based Ma’an News Agency that “Habali is a disabled man who worked at a coffee shop in the city until late night hours.”
A photo of Habali circulated on social media following his death:







عاجل| استشهاد الشاب محمد حسام حبالي (18 عاماً) متأثراً بإصابته برصاص الاحتلال في الحيْ الغربي بمدينة
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a leftist faction, said that the “execution” of Habali was in retaliation for Israel’s failure to capture Ashraf Naalwa, a Palestinian from a village near Tulkarm who is suspected of shooting and killing two Israelis at a settlement industrial plant in early October.
Of the nearly 300 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces so far this year, more than 30 were shot and killed in the occupied West Bank – several during raids on cities, villages and refugee camps.

Deadly raids

In late October, Muhammad Mahmoud Bisharat, 23, was shot and killed and two others were critically injured during a raid in the village of Tamoun, near the town of Tubas.
Bisharat’s brother told the Ma’an News Agency that the young man had met with friends to repel occupation forces from the village but they were ambushed by soldiers who opened heavy fire towards them.
In July, occupation forces shot 14-year-old Arkan Thaer Hilmi Mizher in the chest, killing him, during a raid on Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem.
Israeli soldiers shot Yasin al-Saradih, 35, in the stomach during a raid on Jericho in February, killing him, in what the human rights group Al-Haq said may amount to a war crime “giving rise to individual criminal responsibility at the International Criminal Court.”
Immediately following the incident the Israeli military first alleged that al-Saradih had attacked soldiers with a knife and tried to steal one of their guns. They also claimed that army medics treated al-Saradih on the scene – both claims contradicted by the eyewitness testimony and video footage obtained by Al-Haq.
Israel has conducted an average of 84 military search and arrest operations per week in the West Bank this year, according to the UN monitoring group OCHA.
Pre-dawn raids, undertaken without a warrant or notice while residents are typically asleep, are used to ensure Israel’s “subjugation of the Palestinian population and as a method of social control,” Al-Haq states.

Why is everyone so angry about Saudi Arabia's crown prince? Jamal Khashoggi is only a small part of the story.

A protester wears a mask depicting Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman outside the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 25. (Yasin Akgul/AFP/Getty Images)
A protester wears a mask depicting Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman outside the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 25. (Yasin Akgul/AFP/Getty Images)

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BY -
 
“Caterwauling.” That is how U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo described congressional reaction to the murder of Jamal Khashoggi and the stinging criticism of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in a recent op-ed in the Wall Street Journal. He also called it a “media pile-on.” The piece, which deflected blame for the journalist’s death at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul by focusing on Iran’s (many) misdeeds around the Middle East, argued that Saudi Arabia is too important an ally to censure.

The secretary’s op-ed was tin-eared and convinced absolutely no one. Yet he had a point. The congressional response to Khashoggi’s demise seems so out of character. After all, Congress as a whole has never had any particular interest in the fate of journalists around the world and generally deferred to successive administrations that justified “strategic relationships” with unsavory allies on national security grounds. When it comes to Saudi Arabia’s transgressions, few members were much interested in Yemen, spoke out forcefully about jailed activists, or raised an eyebrow at the crown prince’s accumulation of power. The political reaction to the Khashoggi story is particularly strange because, given its stated preferences, Congress should love Mohammed bin Salman: He hates Iran, has developed ties with Israel, allowed women to drive, and wants to crack down on extremism.
It’s not just Congress, though. Foreign-policy analysts, journalists, Uber drivers, the guys at the bagel place, and the folks at my mom’s bridge club recoil at the mere mention of Saudi Arabia and its young crown prince. There seems to be more to the generalized outrage over the Khashoggi murder than the headlines would suggest.

It’s hard to remember, but it was only last spring that Mohammed bin Salman took Washington by storm. He had friendly meetings at the White House and with a variety of legislators—some of whom are now his harshest critics—from both houses of Congress. All that political and diplomatic goodwill vanished the moment Jamal Khashoggi stepped into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2. Few have fallen so far so fast. It took years for the crown prince’s bête noire, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, to wear out his welcome in Washington. There are still people inside the Beltway who believe that former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was treated unfairly. No one much likes Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, but unlike Mohammed bin Salman, no one has compared him to Saddam Hussein.

So besides the obvious reasons—a disastrous military intervention in Yemen, the brazen murder of Khashoggi, the jailing of reformers, the forced resignation of the prime minister of another country, the plan to build a moat around a neighboring country, and the apparently blind arrogance that makes all this possible—what is behind the anti-Mohammed bin Salman caterwauling?

The first is partisan politics, of course. It is true that there are a fair number of Republicans who have been critical of the crown prince and the Trump administration’s approach to Saudi Arabia. Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham has been outspoken of late, and his party colleague Sen. Mike Lee has consistently sought to hold the Saudis to account for the humanitarian crisis in Yemen. Last week, 14 Republican senators voted with all 47 Democrats and the Senate’s two Independents in favor of a resolution to end U.S. support for Saudi military efforts there, but all 37 “no” votes were also Republican.

About the Author

Steven A. Cook is the Eni Enrico Mattei senior fellow for Middle East and Africa studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. His latest book is False Dawn: Protest, Democracy, and Violence in the New Middle East. @stevenacook

Still, it’s the unanimity and vehemence of Democrats on the issue that’s most remarkable. It’s due partly to the perceived personal closeness between U.S. President Donald Trump’s family and the Saudi crown prince. It’s not just that the administration—as Pompeo made clear in the Wall Street Journal—regards Saudi Arabia as the pillar of its policy to contain and roll back malign Iranian influence around the Middle East. Outside the halls of Congress, commentators have speculated that the president’s effort to shield Mohammed bin Salman from blame in Khashoggi’s death has something to do with the Trump Organization’s business ties to Saudi Arabia. Meanwhile, the president’s son-in-law and senior advisor Jared Kushner apparently stays up late swapping stories and strategizing with the crown prince. And for their part, the Saudis, still angry over former U.S. President Barack Obama’s policies, allowed themselves to become a partisan issue. They are squarely on Team Trump (along with the Israelis, Egyptians, and Emiratis).

Not to diminish the moral repugnance of Jamal Khashoggi’s murder—a legitimate source of outrage—but it did provide another opportunity for Trump’s opponents in Congress, as well as editorial writers, columnists, and allegedly objective analysts, to assail a leader they loathe. This is the context in which to understand efforts like that of the incoming chair of the House Select Committee on Intelligence, Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, who has vowed to get to the bottom of the Khashoggi murder and explore Trump’s ties to the Saudi royal family.

Second, the anger at Saudi Arabia over Khashoggi’s murder seems connected to unfinished business related to the attacks on New York and Washington in September 2001. Relevant here is the fact that journalists are routinely abused in Egypt, Turkey, Hungary, Russia, China, and Iran—U.S. allies and foes alike—but their names and stories generally remain unknown except to a small group of activists and analysts at organizations like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the Committee to Protect Journalists. The difference is U.S. officials’ lingering knowledge about—and lack of public reckoning with—Saudi responsibility for 9/11. They seem to have determined that with Khashoggi’s brutal death, enough is enough.

Everyone knows that 15 of 19 hijackers were Saudis, but the American public remains in the dark about aspects of the attacks directly related to Saudi Arabia. Perhaps the parts of the 9/11 Commission Report that remain outside public view are part of an effort to protect sources and methods, but they sow suspicions that Saudis played a role beyond the 15 known terrorists. The depth of American anger is reflected in the 2016 Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act, which paved the way for families of 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia in U.S. courts. The legislation passed in the Senate 97-1 and in the House of Representatives 348-77.

Khashoggi’s murder added fuel to the latent anger of 9/11. Mohammed bin Salman has engaged in some awful behavior, and many in Washington no longer feel the need to sweep bad Saudi behavior under the rug.

Washington has also grown to detest the Saudi crown prince, because he represents a world that seems to be spinning out of control. Khashoggi was neither the first nor the last person to be a victim of state-sponsored violence. Yet his brazen murder comes at a time when journalists, academics, reformers, and critics have come under attack everywhere from the Philippines and Pakistan to Bahrain and even the United States. The idea that the Saudi crown prince, who is widely presumed to have ordered the hit on Khashoggi, will get away with it stokes fear and outrage. If he is not held accountable, any remaining norms against the kind of international thuggery that Khashoggi’s murder exemplifies will be shattered. Observers fear that it will then be open season on anyone who crosses a line with a given leader.

Finally, Mohammed bin Salman has fallen victim to the bruising debate within the policy community over his leadership ever since he emerged as the likely inheritor to the Saudi throne. Some analysts were convinced that he was a genuine reformer who deserved U.S. support. They pointed to his willingness to rein in the religious police, give women the right to drive, and modestly relax of Saudi social strictures along with promoting a broad—if not entirely workable—plan to re-engineer the economy as proof that as far as Saudi leaders go, Mohammed bin Salman was about the best you were going to get. Other observers saw something completely different in the same man—a power-hungry and reckless leader-in-waiting who deserved no credit as a reformer so long as he was locking up opponents and making war on the region’s poorest country. The skeptics turned out to be correct, and to the winners go the spoils.

In the rough-and-tumble world of social media, defenders of the crown prince—or anyone sympathetic to the case the Trump administration has made for continuing close ties with Mohammed bin Salman and the Saudis—have been mercilessly criticized and mocked. Some of it is deserved, but no one’s analysis is ever perfect. Still, the Twitter herd has taken over, and it hates the Saudi crown prince. One can dismiss Twitter as a cesspool overflowing with bile, but in 2018 it does frame the terms of public debate on many issues, including Mohammed bin Salman.

Despite the Trump administration’s determined efforts to get beyond the Khashoggi murder, it’s going to be difficult. The entire episode reveals not just the brutality of Mohammed bin Salman and his entourage, but also the stream of American resentments that flows beneath the near-constant drip of revelations from the Turkish government and unnamed U.S. intelligence officials. The Saudis, in turn, have their own grievances against the United States. Pompeo clearly wants to compartmentalize U.S.-Saudi relations, separating out the Iran challenge for special treatment, but Jamal Khashoggi and the anger his murder has unleashed won’t let him.

Shanghai named Asia’s most expensive city for rich shoppers




By  |  | @AzimIdrisHybrid
SHANGHAI has been named Asia’s most expensive city for a myriad of luxury goods and services, overtaking Hong Kong as the prime location where High Net Worth Individuals (HNWI) splurge on their lifestyle spending, according to a report.
The Bank Julius Baer Co.’s annual Wealth Report: Asia, which tracks where the rich spend their money, also found that jewellery and gems are among the most favoured passion investments among HNWIs in Asia.
The report cited luxury auction house Sotheby’s findings that Asian clients account for about a third of global high-end jewellery sales.
In one comparison, Julius Baer benchmarked the prices of the Cartier Love Bracelet which were found to be the most expensive in Shanghai (USD 48,143), while on the other hand in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the jewellery retails for Kuala Lumpur US$41,818, replacing Hong Kong as the most price competitive market.
Shanghai’s largest price tag for the item was due to high import tariffs on luxury jewellery, approximately 40 percent, while the findings of the two other cities arose from the twin effects of higher prices in Hong Kong and marked declines in Kuala Lumpur.
The Switzerland-based bank defines High Net Worth Individuals (HNWI) as people who have a net investible wealth of US$1 million or more. The assets they possessed exclude the property that is their main residence.
The survey, which is in its eighth year, involved the collection of data from June 2017 to July this year.
Also contained in the report is the Julius Baer Lifestyle Index 2018, which compares 22 goods and services across 11 Asian cities, including Hong Kong, Singapore, Shanghai, Mumbai, Taipei, Jakarta, Manila, Seoul, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, and Tokyo.
In the report’s the His & Hers Index, the bank compares the cost of grooming for wealthy women and men across Asia.
“Our Julius Baer Lifestyle Index maintains its upward trajectory since its launch eight years ago, underscoring the strength in demand for luxury goods and services in Asia,” the bank said in a statement.
2017-10-18T032403Z_1912986969_RC1C83235F10_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-CONGRESS-LAWMAKING
A poster with a portrait of Chinese President Xi Jinping overlooks a street in Shanghai, China, September 21, 2017. The slogan reads: “Follow the Party’s command. Be capable of winning wars. Maintain good discipline.” Picture taken September 21, 2017. Source: Reuters/Aly Song
“Government efforts to boost domestic consumption, price harmonisation by luxury companies, and the scarcity factor were among the contributing factors to robust price trends.”
What justifies the price tag of a luxury jewellery piece?
According to Julius Baer, this depended on the item’s prestigious brand, the intricacy of the craftsmanship, as well as the quality of the precious stones, that enhance its desirability.
“Market trends are significant too. For instance, natural pearls went through a spectacular growth a few years ago, though prices have since cooled off,” it said.
“Looking at Asian demand, the rise of mainland Chinese buyers over the past decade bears close watching. Despite China’s anti-corruption drive, the impact on domestic spending on high-end jewellery has been limited.”
Luxury jewellery sales in China increased by 6.6 percent year-on-year to RNB14.9 billion (US$ 2.17 billion) in 2017, the bank said, citing data from market researchers Euromonitor.
“Many mainland Chinese continue to buy rare pieces that include top-of-the line diamonds, coloured gemstones and jadeite to diversify their investment portfolios amid a volatile global economy.”
“Vintage signed jewellery has also garnered investor interest, given their appreciation in value in recent times.”