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, January 14, 2019

Wahhabi Salafi orthodoxy and an apostate


Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun (C) accompanied by Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland (R) and Saba Abbas, General Counsellor of COSTI refugee service agency, arrives at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Toronto, Ontario, Canada 12 January – Reuters
logoMonday, 14 January 2019

“Don’t let anyone break your wings, you are free, fight and get your RIGHTS,” were the words tweeted by the 18-year-old apostate, Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun from Saudi Arabia, who renounced Islam, ran away from her family and sought asylum in a foreign country.
UNHCR recognised her as a refugee and Canada welcomed her. The Saudi Government washed its hands off from any responsibility and treated the matter as a family issue. A regime that is already reeling under international pressure calling for justice over the brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi is understandably keeping its distance from the whole affair.

However, is the Saudi regime totally blameless? Is the regime not in collusion with the most ultra-conservative religious ideology, Wahhabi Salafism, which is making life oppressive for women in that country?

For decades, if not centuries, women in that kingdom have been crying to be freed from the suffocating rigidities of a religious orthodoxy that is depriving them of their God-given dignity and human right? The reality is that in Wahhabi Salafism Saudi Monarchy finds a powerful weapon to keep its people under submission. To relax the grip of Wahhabi Salafism is to invite danger for the survival of the regime itself. 

Rahaf, in her tweeted message, added further that she was ill-treated by her family for cutting her hair short and was locked up in a room for six months. She is now fearing for her life, because she has renounced Islam and become an apostate for which Shariah prescribes death as punishment.

Her father, in an interview to authorities in Thailand, said that she is one of his 10 children and admitted without elaboration that she may have felt “neglected” at times.  If family abuse was the main grievance, the girl could have just run away without renouncing Islam. Why did she renounce both?


Oppressive nature of religious orthodoxy

About three decades ago, while I was chatting in Perth, Australia, with the late Egyptian born Dr. El-Irian, an internationally-recognised scholar in cultural studies, a humanist and a former President of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, on Muslim affairs, he said with great regret and concern that “orthodoxy has made Islam unliveable for the young and many are running away from it”.  Rahaf’s escape and apostasy has provided the latest factual proof to El-Irian’s statement. What follows is a short exposition of the oppressive nature of religious orthodoxy focusing mainly on Wahhabi Salafism.

While European Enlightenment in the 16th century gave birth to modernity, intellectual rationalism and scientific theories, post-modernism in the 20th century revolted against all structured theories of its predecessor and produced in turn a new era that challenged even the rationalist assumptions of modernism. Post-modernism marks the beginning of an age of endless revolt against all received wisdom and relentless search to discover and experiment new responses and solutions to problems confronting every branch of human life. The questions why and why not are the driving forces behind this ceaseless quest and they are dismantling age-old fortresses of wisdom built on spiritual foundations.

However, this ceaseless quest has hit a brick wall in the Muslim world, particularly where Muslims live in majority and where religious orthodoxy and orthopraxy have strangle hold over the believers thought and actions.

The Wahhabi Salafi package is an all-or-nothing offer. No question about the contents of the package is tolerated and no suggestion for repackaging is entertained. Nevertheless, the walls of Salafi orthodoxy are beginning to crack. The internet and social media have opened the flood gates for internal challenges. While questions are now being asked and suggestions for change are pushed from within the Salafi stronghold itself, by a group of “Muted Modernists”, as Medawi al-Rasheed, the Saudi Arabia born scholar calls them, an 18-year-old girl has decided to reject the entire package and caught the world’s attention. To this youngster, Salafi orthodoxy with its orthopraxy and her own family schooled in that oppressive environment have become intolerable, and hence her decision to become an apostate. She is not the first woman to do so however, nor will be the last
Logically speaking, modernism and its post-modern prodigy should have started in the world of Islam had the rationalist movement that sprouted in the 9th and blossomed till the end of 11th centuries been allowed to grow unchallenged and pushed to the brink of extinction by a state backed religious orthodoxy based on narrow scriptural readings. This orthodoxy since then had become the handmaiden of Muslim autocrats and oppressive regimes in their determination to keep in submission people whom they rule. Saudi Arabia is a classic example of this diabolic partnership between autocracy and religious orthodoxy cum orthopraxy.

Moreover, after the Second World War and during the Cold War, US superpower with its European allies found this partnership particularly handy in designing a new Middle East Order. Thus, Saudi Arabia with her petroleum resources is uniquely protected from the intrusion of any post-modern tendencies. Any sign of such tendency is nipped in the bud either through monetary bribe or bloodshed. What happened there in the aftermath of the Arab Spring is proof of this. Yet, as will be shown later, this protection is crumbling through the floodgates of a digital age.

A mosaic of differentiated ideologies

Islamic religious orthodoxy, like Islam itself, is not a monolith. It is a mosaic of differentiated ideologies founded by leaders of different nationalities and cultures with different objectives and methodologies. They also differ in respect of their degree of tolerance towards alternative views and critical thought. Within this mosaic however, the Wahhabi brand of Salafi orthodoxy born in Saudi Arabia is perhaps the most rigid and ultraconservative.

Although the eponymous Wahhabism began in 18th century and founded by preacher Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab, and gained ascendancy and permanency through his political alliance with the tribal chief Muhammad bin Saud, its religious philosophy has a long genealogy traceable to the ideas of one of the four famous imams in Sunni Islam, Ahmad ibn Hanbal (780-855).

Of the four Sunni schools of thought Hanbalism is the most rigid. Wahhabi Salafism with its orthopraxy is a distinct package of dos and don’ts, administered through a state backed religious bureaucracy and institutions that is suffocating the ordinary life of many of the kingdom’s subjects, particularly that of the womenfolk. How this is can be demonstrated by few examples.

In 2002, when Girls’ School No. 31 caught fire in Mecca, 15 of its young students perished in that fire, only because the mutawween or religious police refused to allow those girls escape, because they were “not properly covered”. To this police, a piece of cloth was more sacrosanct than 15 bubbling human lives.

No woman in that country can step out of her house alone unless accompanied by a relative male. Even then, she should be properly covered from head to toe. Driving by women was prohibited, which led to the ‘Women2Drive’ protest movement by some daring females. They were arrested and thrown into jail. Some of them are reported still languishing in prison even though prohibition has been removed recently, by the so-called modernist Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman, who is alleged to have masterminded the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

To apply for a driving licence a woman has to first get permission from her husband or father. Gender mixing even in offices is strictly prohibited. Men are permitted to have multiple wives and concubines, but women cannot have multiple husbands or boyfriends. In short, women in Saudi Arabia are virtually second class citizens.


Wahhabi Salafi package is an all-or-nothing offer 

The Wahhabi Salafi package is an all-or-nothing offer. No question about the contents of the package is tolerated and no suggestion for repackaging is entertained. Nevertheless, the walls of Salafi orthodoxy are beginning to crack. The internet and social media have opened the flood gates for internal challenges.

While questions are now being asked and suggestions for change are pushed from within the Salafi stronghold itself, by a group of “Muted Modernists”, as Medawi al-Rasheed, the Saudi Arabia born scholar calls them, an 18-year-old girl has decided to reject the entire package and caught the world’s attention.

To this youngster, Salafi orthodoxy with its orthopraxy and her own family schooled in that oppressive environment have become intolerable, and hence her decision to become an apostate. She is not the first woman to do so however, nor will be the last.


Clash between tradition and post-modernity

There is an observable tension within the world of Islam between the champions of religious orthodoxy based on mytho-historical mindset and a growing generation of young men and women equipped with a post-modernist techno-scientific mindset. There is, in other words, a clash between tradition and post-modernity.

The whys and why nots that the new generation is asking cannot be satisfactorily answered with quotations from past wisdom and examples from past generations. Without the power of reasoning and logic and without tolerance for alternate views and approaches religious leaders cannot guide the new generation.

It is this glaring g failure by orthodoxy that prompted El-Irian to make that statement and the young girl to become an apostate. The challenge is not only for Saudi Arabia but also by inference to all other shades of religious orthodoxies that are trying to close the flood gates of reason and logic.

(The writer is attached to the School of Business and Governance, Murdoch University, Western Australia.)

Venezuela to refine tonnes of gold in Turkey amid US sanctions

Venezuela's minister of industries and national production will finalise the deal during a visit to Turkey on Wednesday

Erdogan visited his Venezuelan counterpart Nicolas Maduro in December (AFP)

Ragip Soylu's picture
Ragip Soylu, Turkey Correspondent
ISTANBUL - Venezuela and Turkey are working on a deal to ship tonnes of gold to refine and certify in Turkish city of Corum this year.
Facing sanctions and international pressure, Venezuela is increasingly turning to Turkey as a partner in the Middle East. Ankara will provide a host of services to Caracas, including building hospital and schools and providing humanitarian aid as a part of the gold refining deal.
Venezuelan Minister of Industries and National Production Tareck El Aissami will finalise a deal on the gold trade during a visit to Turkey on Wednesday. He will also tour an industrial complex in Corum, where Ahlatci Metal company has a refinery with an annual capacity of 365 tonnes, according to a spokesperson from Ahlatci Metal.
Aissami is visiting Turkey amid US sanctions against Venezuelan gold imports, which are further debilitating the country's failing economy that is in need of fresh capital. Aissami himself is targeted by a set of sanctions by European Union and the US due to allegation of corruption and drug trafficking.
The new deal has been in the making since Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to Venezuela in December. Erdogan had personally introduced businessman Ahmet Ahlatci to president Nicolas Maduro as a likely candidate to refine the gold.

Venezuelan gold

Mehmet Ozkan, a former Turkish official who worked on bilateral relations with Venezuela until last year, said that Caracas has been exporting its gold to Turkey for safekeeping since the beginning of the last year.
But now, Ozkan added, the main objective was to refine the raw metal and create a capital inflow to Venezuela, likely in the form of services because of US sanctions that prohibit financial institutions from dealing with Venezuela in dollars.
Turkish statistics indicate that Turkey imported $900 million in gold - about 23.6 tonnes - from Venezuela in the first nine months of 2018.
Ozkan, who is now a senior fellow Washington-based Center for Global Policy, said gold is replacing oil as Venezuela's chief source of income.
"They have significant problems in producing and refining the oil," he said of Venezuela. "Most of the oil income also has been automatically deducted by the international parties for Venezuelan debt overseas. Naturally gold came forward as good choice," Ozkan said.  
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Venezuelan gold, however, has been suffering from controversies, including environmental concerns and allegations of involvement of organised crime in the industry.
And with recent US sanctions that criminalise gold imports from the country, the industry is expected dwindle. It remains to be seen whether Venezuela would be able to continue to export more than 20 tonnes of gold in 2019.
However, Turkey maintains its close contact with Caracas, and last week Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay attended the official inauguration of Maduro for his second term as president.

Diplomacy and sanctions

A Turkish source with knowledge of Turkish-Venezuela relations, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the ties were based on mutual disdain of West and some form of economic opportunity.
Ankara may also play a role as mediator for regional politics in South America, the source added.
For example, the source said, Colombia and Venezuela, who endure tense relations that hit the rock bottom last year with threats of military clashes, have secretly tried explore turning to Ankara as an arbiter to conduct reconciliation talks.
Ozkan says Turkey’s relations with Venezuela will probably deepen the problems between Ankara and Washington, adding to the strain of ties between the NATO allies because of disagreements over US sanctions on Iran.
At an event in Washington last year, Marshall Billingslea, assistant secretary for terrorist financing at US Treasury Department, accused the Turkish government of skirting international sanctions by purchasing tonnes of Venezuelan gold.

Mercy for China’s Uighurs


by Eric S. Margolis - 
Reports coming in about China’s new gulag for Muslims seem too awful to believe.  But the United Nations and responsible media have revealed that hundreds of thousands of Uighur Muslims from western China – and perhaps as many as one million – have been shut away in a growing chain of prison camps designed to impose ruthless state control over them and crush their culture and religion.

Who are these oddly-named people, China’s Uighurs?  Their homeland lies on China’s far western region next to independent Kazakhstan and Pakistan.  The region, as I’ve seen, is arid, hilly and very remote.  The Uighurs are a Turkic people of ancient Muslim culture who have nothing in common with China except proximity.  Their once independent nation used to be called the East Turkestan Republic before it was invaded and gobbled up in 1949 by Red China and, before that, by the Russian Empire.

A year later, Communist China began invading independent Tibet.  China’s aim there was to crush Tibetan national resistance to Chinese rule and wipe out as much as possible of Tibet’s ancient feudal and religious culture.  I infiltrated into Tibet in the 1980’s in time to see violent Tibetan demonstrations and riots against the Chinese occupiers.  Four decades later, draconian Chinese rule is well on the way to crushing the life out of Tibet’s ancient Buddhist culture.

The same process is happening now in Eastern Turkestan.  This strategic piece of real estate is part of the ethnic Turkish Central Asia that includes Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzia, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.  Mongolia and Afghanistan are sometimes included.  In the late 19th century, there arose the Pan-Turkic movement in Turkey that sought to unite Central Asia under the guidance of Istanbul.

 But in the end, the Russian Empire and China occupied Central Asia until the collapse of the Soviet Union.  Today, China is the last remaining colonial master.

The Uighurs, a forgotten people, have been protesting and resisting Chinese rule since the late 1940’s.  Beijing has always seen Islam as a challenge to its absolute rule.  Uighur resistance has been limited and ineffectual.  But Beijing had a big scare when the US CIA set up camps in Afghanistan in the late 1970’s to train Uighurs into an anti-Chinese guerilla force for use in a potential future US-China war.  When the US invaded Afghanistan in 2001, the former CIA training camps for Uighurs were brazenly called ‘Islamic terrorist training camps’ and blamed on Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida.
China has set about uprooting Muslim culture and identity.  Religious devotions, beards and traditional Islamic dress, the Uighur language itself, and historic customs are banned.  Communist party members are billeted in the home of Uighurs to keep a wary eye on them.  Schools are run by Chinese officials; Uighur movements are restricted; mosques are shuttered.

Over the past year, China has reportedly been building what are officially called ‘re-education’ centers in the region.  The UN reports that up to one million Muslims have been locked away in these modern gulags, surrounded by barbed wire and watch towers.  China’s prison complex, known as ‘laogai,’ covers the nation, but the Muslim gulag appears particularly brutal and intimidating.  Of course, a million Muslims in China’s prisons pales in comparison to the two million, mostly blacks, in US state and federal prisons (though none are charged with religious crimes).

China’s strategy in Tibet and Eastern Turkestan has been what I call ‘ethnic inundation.’  Han Chinese are brought in from afar to settle Muslim and Buddhist lands, relentlessly swamping the local population who become a policed minority.  Interestingly, Israel has been following the same policy on the West Bank and Golan.  Gaza has been turned into a giant, open-air prison for Palestinians.  China’s Turkestan gulag may surpass Gaza in the number of prisoners it holds.   Unsurprisingly, China rarely criticizes Israel for its repression of Palestinians.

The Muslim world has done next to nothing to protest the fate of the Uighurs.  Only Turkey, one of the few Muslim nations with self-respect, is strongly rebuking China and giving refuge to Uighur refugees.  Those self-proclaimed ‘defenders of the faith,’ Saudi Arabia, have been mute to the oppression in Turkestan – as mute as they have been to the savage mistreatment of Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims, 800,000 of whom are now living in awful condition in Bangladesh.

As with the sordid murder of Saudi writer Khashoggi by Saudi agents, few dare rebuke the rich perpetrator of the crime.  No one wants to be on China’s black list.

Brexit explained: Could there be a second referendum?

10 Dec 2018
As the UK’s departure date from the EU draws nearer, we look at whether a second referendum is possible – and if so, how it might look.

New air pollution plans improve on EU rules, government claims

UK proposals include new regulations on farmers, wood-burning stoves and diesel cars

 Household wood-burning stoves will come under new restrictions. Photograph: Global Warming Images/Alamy


The government has set out new plans on air pollution that ministers say go beyond existing EU rules, with a pledge to improve air quality nationwide to the standards the World Health Organization (WH0) recommends.

Farmers will be subject to such air quality regulations for the first time to cut their growing contribution to pollution, under the government plans set out on Monday, while diesel vehicle drivers and owners of wood-burning stoveswill also face restrictions.

Under the government’s plans, only the cleanest forms of biomass stoves will be available from 2022, and farmers will be required to reduce their fertiliser use and the emissions of ammonia – a potent air-polluting gas, which can combine with other forms of air pollution to lodge small particles deep in the lungs – from fertiliser and livestock. Sales of bituminous or traditional house coal may also be phased out.

Ministers said the number of people living in areas with pollution above WHO guidelines would be halved by 2025. The government said air pollution was one of the biggest threats to public health in the UK, behind only cancer, obesity and heart disease.

But critics said the plans were short on detail, with no deadlines for meeting the WHO limits, and fell short of the status of EU targets, which are enshrined in law. Legal challenges to the government over its failure to adhere to EU rules, which resulted in a supreme court ruling against ministers last year, have played a key part in bringing air pollution to government attention in the last five years.

The social and economic costs of air pollution in the UK were likely to be greater than previously thought, the government said, citing calculations that the cost of air pollution could reach £18.6bn between now and 2035. Ministers said the new plans should reduce the cost to the NHS and society by £1.7bn a year by 2020, rising to £5.3bn a year from 2030.

Fresh science on the dangers of air pollution has been piling up. On Saturday, the Guardian reported new evidence that air pollution can increase the risk of miscarriage in early pregnancy, compared by one doctor to the effects of smoking. In recent years, studies have linked air pollution to dementia, heart conditions and birth defects. About 7 million people a year are estimated to die from air pollution around the world.

Michael Gove, the environment secretary, said the UK needed a new strategy to improve air quality. “The evidence is clear: while air quality has improved significantly in recent years, air pollution continues to shorten lives, harm our children and reduce quality of life,” he said.

After Brexit, the UK will no longer be subject to EU legislation on air pollution, which the government has flouted repeatedly in the last decade, and which has formed the basis of challenges by campaigners that have forced ministers to change course and put in place measures to reduce the problem.

The government is aiming to phase out sales of new petrol and diesel cars by 2040. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

The government has not made it clear whether there will be new legislation that would allow ministers to be held to account in future over the commitments they are making.

Simon Alcock, the head of public affairs at ClientEarth, a legal advocacy group that has taken the government to court on several occasions, called for a clearer framework: “Action to protect people’s health must be a requirement, not a nice-to-have.”

Gove said traffic pollution – targeted by campaigners as the key source of small particles that lodge deep in the lungs, and nitrogen oxides and other gases that irritate the breathing passages – was only part of the problem. “While air pollution may conjure images of traffic jams and exhaust fumes, transport is only one part of the story, and the new strategy sets out the important role all of us can play in reducing emissions and cleaning up our air to protect our health,” said Gove.

There were no new major measures in the strategy to combat pollution from vehicles, but a restatement of last year’s pledge to end the sale of new conventional petrol and diesel vehicles by 2040, which campaigners said was too far away.

Morten Thaysen, a clean air campaigner for Greenpeace UK, said: “The government is saying all the right things about the huge cost in human lives and money, but is proposing nothing new to tackle pollution from road transport. A 2040 phase-out date for diesel and petrol is effectively saying that yes, your grandchildren deserve clean air, but your children will have to go on breathing toxic fumes so as not to disrupt the car industry’s sales forecasts.”

A spokeswoman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs told the Guardian: “We will not weaken our environmental protection when we leave the EU, but will maintain and even enhance our already high environmental standards. Our clean air strategy shows how we will go further and faster than the EU in reducing human exposure to particulate-matter pollution. This will be underpinned by new England-wide powers to control major sources of air pollution, plus new local powers to take action in areas with an air pollution problem.”

Lens replacement led to 'blind patches', says artist


Landscape painter Denise De Batista
Landscape painter Denise Di Battista says her sight is both her life and her livelihood

14 January 2019
An artist whose vision deteriorated after lens replacement surgery is one of dozens of people considering legal action against manufacturer, Oculentis.
Denise Di Battista claims she has "blind patches" in her right eye.
The BBC has been told that there have been 800 cases of patients in the UK experiencing "opacification" of a particular implanted Oculentis lens.
Opacification is a known risk of this surgery, can occur with any intraocular lens and can have multiple causes.
Denise Di Battista is a landscape painter and her sight is both her life and her livelihood.
Like many people who have cataracts, or simply want to improve their vision, Denise had a routine eye operation in 2010 to replace both of her natural lenses.
However, a few years later, the vision in her right eye unexpectedly started to deteriorate.
"If I was looking through my right eye, I would think I was almost blind…. It affects my painting and that depresses me terribly," she told the BBC.
Denise does not have a problem with black-and-white contrast but she does with colours, tones and low light.
She says the picture of the shoes below represents what she can see in low light with her "good" left eye.
The second image represents the level of vision in her affected right eye.
Shoe images
Denise says these images show the difference between her left and right eyes
 Denise says she was devastated when she learned the problem was possibly caused by an issue with the lens.
"I was very, very shocked. When I came out of the consulting room, my daughter was waiting for me and she said I looked white."
The lenses Denise received were made by European manufacturer Oculentis.
Reports began to emerge that a small number of patients who had received a particular lens were experiencing what is known as opacification, a cloudiness in their vision, caused by calcium deposits.
Oculentis investigated and identified the problem as possibly being the result of an interaction between phosphate crystals used in the hydration process and silicone residues on the lens.
The company says there is evidence some people may be predisposed to this problem or that certain medication can be a factor.
Oculentis decided to advise providers to return affected batches of the type of lens Denise had been given. There is no suggestion that any Oculentis lenses currently available are affected.
Leading eye surgeon Sheraz Daya, who has tried to help patients like Denise, told the BBC: "A percentage of lenses have deposits of calcium on the surface that only become evident five to seven years later, when they accumulate enough to obscure their vision.
"It is understandably devastating for patients who thought they were done and dusted for life and didn't anticipate an issue with the lens."
Eye operation
Oculentis is paying for some patients to undergo surgery to replace the lenses
Oculentis says the only way to correct the problem is to replace the lenses and has paid for surgeons like Sheraz Daya to do this. Thus far about half of those affected have had their lenses replaced.
Around half a million people have cataract surgery each year, making it the most commonly performed operation in the UK.
There are an estimated 800 cases from the affected batches of Oculentis lenses which have led to problems with opacification, a very small proportion of the total.
In a statement, Oculentis told the BBC: "We regret if any patients have experienced complications following the implant of one of our lenses.
"Opacification, or clouding of the lens, is a known risk of lens eye surgery and can be caused by a number of factors interacting, which are not necessarily attributable to the lens itself.
Landscape painter Denise De Batista
Denise is nervous about having another procedure on her eyes
"The incidence rate is extremely low. It can be effectively remedied through lens exchange surgery, which is a safe and well-established procedure.
"Anyone experiencing any vision impairment should consult their surgeon or clinic who will be able to diagnose the cause and recommend an appropriate course of action, otherwise there is no need for any concern."
Denise Di Battista's lawyer, Peter Todd, a partner at Hodge, Jones & Allen, said: "Mrs Di Battista has been left devastated by the deterioration in her sight since she had the Oculentis lens implanted.
"She is one of dozens of people who we are representing in upcoming legal action. All claim to have suffered similar experiences after having the lens implanted. We will be launching legal proceedings shortly."
The BBC has learnt that another law firm Devonshires also has dozens of similar cases.
Denise De Battista is nervous about having her lens replaced as the procedure is not routine and not all eye surgeons are prepared to do it.
So, for the time being, the land and seascapes that she loves and paints remain clouded and obscured.

Militarisation: Sri Lankan army starts cement business in occupied Mullaitivu


 12 January 2019
The Sri Lankan army occupying the Mulliyavalai thuyilum illam (LTTE cemetery) in Mullaitivu has started selling cement bricks, angering residents who say that the army has involved itself in every small-scale commercial activity in the district, undercutting local traders.
Adverts for the business appeared outside the 59th division camp this week with a telephone order service.
"We ask them to return our lands and withdraw from our daily lives, and instead they find another livelihood of ours to destroy," a resident said.
Representatives of Mullaitivu have consistently stated that the militarisation and the military's stranglehold on the district's economy was a key factor for the high level of poverty in the district.

Appointing Shavendra Silva as the Chief of Staff of the army is Sri Lanka’s way of thumping its nose at the international community


LEN logo(Lanka e News - 12.Jan.2019, 11.30PM) The recent appointment of Shavendra Silva (Silva) as the Chief of Staff of the Sri Lankan army has sent shock waves through the Tamil community, and to all those interested in human rights and accountability in Sri Lanka. Such appointment, particularly as Sri Lanka’s human rights record is about to be reviewed in Geneva in March 2019, is a clear message to the international community that the country cares little about its views and the potential consequences of its failures in faithfully implementing the UNHRC resolution 30, 34/1.
Among all the Sri Lankan military officers implicated in war crimes, Silva is perhaps the most well-known. In many ways, he symbolised war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Sri Lankan armed forces during the last stages of the war and the extent to which the country is prepared to hide and protect its military from honest scrutiny and accountability.
Brigadier Silva was the General Officer Commanding of the military’s controversial 58th Division that battled the LTTE in the Vanni in the final days of the conflict. There are multiple reports that strongly implicate Silva with war crimes. The UN Panel of Experts Report (2011) alleged that it was in surrendering to his Division that several LTTE members were shot dead (the infamous ‘White Flag Case’). According to the South Africa based International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP - 2018), eye witnesses placed Silva on site and claim he even shook hands with the LTTE political wing leaders who surrendered on 18 May 2009, only to be summarily executed shortly thereafter. It has called on the Office of the Missing Persons (OMP) to investigate this as the first case if it was serious about criminal accountability for enforced disappearances, and for Major General Silva to be questioned first. Troops under his command were also credibly accused of shelling hospitals and no-fire zone packed with women, children and elderly refugees.
When Silva was appointed as Sri Lanka’s Deputy Permanent Representative to UN in August 2010, it was viewed not just as Sri Lanka’s attempt to give the highest protection to the most notorious of its military officers, but also as a test of the international will with regards to the extent of their commitment in ensuring war time accountability. During his UN tenure, a law suit was filed against Silva by the relatives of Tamil victims in the District Court of the Southern District of New York, which as expected, Silva fended off invoking diplomatic immunity. Though the original attempts at preventing Silva’s appointment to the UN failed, a consolation of some sorts was achieved when Silva was debarred from participating in meetings of the Special Advisory Group related to UN peace keeping missions of which he was a member representing the Asian group of countries. The chairperson of the Group, Louise Frechette, a former UN Deputy Secretary General, informed Silva that his participation in the Group was ‘inappropriate’ and advised him to keep away from all ‘deliberations’ of the panel.
Despite these setbacks, the rise and rise of Silva in the ranks of the Sri Lankan army continued unabated after his return from New York – first promoted as Adjunct General, Director of Operations and now a General and the army’s Chief of Staff. None of this is surprising, and indeed expected, by those who intimately understand Sri Lanka’s real lack of commitment to address criminal accountability involving its armed forces, particularly those prominent officers often venerated as war heroes despite their despicable record.
The question is how the international community will face up to these challenges when Sri Lanka once again reports its progress on implementing resolution 30, 34/1 in March 2019, when it will have nothing to report on the criminal accountability of its armed forces. The Silva episode must be one important factor when UNHRC member countries decide on appropriate responses and setting up mechanisms to achieve accountability and reconciliation in Sri Lanka for the post March 2019 period.
Press release from the Global Tamil Forum
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by     (2019-01-13 00:32:11)

Batticaloa shuts down in protest of Eastern Province governor appointment

Tamils in Batticaloa observed a hartal, a business-strike, in protest of the appointment of former UPFA MP M. L. A. M. Hizbullah as governor of the Eastern Province.
 12 January 2019

Organisers of the protest said that Hizbullah, a pro-Rajapaksa politician who is being investigated for corruption, was unfit to to represent the Eastern Province.
Locals have also accused Hizbullah of exacerbating inter-community tensions in the East during his time in the Eastern Provincial Council.
The hartal saw Batticaloa town and other Tamil-majority towns in the district shut down on Friday with local and national businesses such as banks closed.
There were also reports of tyre burnings in some areas.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Black Media further exposed - UNP


Lahiru Fernando-Saturday, January 12, 2019

The United National Party stressed it had no involvement in the protest carried out by a number of social activists’ groups opposite several media institutes in Colombo on Thursday.
Issuing a special statement yesterday, the party said the UNP is committed to promote and protect the freedom of media.

The statement also said another regrettable fact is that these media institutions are branding the participants of these peaceful and civilized protests as NGO members and conspirators while crowning those who stage protests violating laws and promoting violence as patriots.

The United National Party also appreciated media institutions which accepted the letters presented by the protesting group while strongly condemning the conduct of the other ‘Black Media’ which showed their autocracy by refusing to accept their letters.

“The party has come to know this protest had been conducted by a group of social activists, who came forward on October 26 for the sake of protecting democracy and people’s sovereignty,”it said.
“Our party has paid close attention into the protests staged by a number of social activists groups in front of the media institutions handing over letters.We have also focused our attention regarding certain media reports claiming that these protests were staged by an NGO team instigated by UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe,”it said.

“It should be reminded how the UNP appeared for the freedom of media and the protection of the journalists when media institutions faced violence and were bombed and journalists were threatened and killed.We also appeared on behalf of the people’s freedom of expression.Any citizen has the right to stage peaceful protests under the laws of the country.By attacking and chasing away civilized and disciplined protests by using the media power, such media institutions showed nothing other than the real faces of the Black Media Mafia.”

No Board, No Chairman, No Director: Tamasha By J’pura Hospital Stooges With Rajitha

logoA dinner was organized by the fake director of Sri Jayewardenepura General Hospital (SJGH) to “review and recognize the hard work and commitment of all senior staff for all consultants, executive staff and unit heads” on Friday 11th January 2019. This event was held with the attendance of the Minister of Health Rajitha Senaratne at the Grand Monarch Thalawathugoda, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns. According to the invitation email circulated by the fake Director of SJGH Susitha Senaratne, this is a celebration of the “the remarkable improvement of hospital services in 2018“. 
Infamous 2018 At J’Pura Hospital
The SJGH is currently on its third year of failure to present acceptable audits to the Auditor General of Sri Lanka. The daily loss of revenue per day of this once prestigious hospital is 4 million rupees a day. 
In January 2018, 600 strong nursing staff took to the streets, along with other categories of staff bringing the hospital to a standstill for 10 days, the first ever such shut down in the hospital’s 36 year history. These workers demanded the recruitment of a duly qualified director instead of the political stooge and thug of Rajitha Senaratne.