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

Sunday, April 21, 2019

The Triumph Of Evil

The Trump regime has branded the democratically twice-elected Maduro an “illegitimate” president. 

 
by Paul Craig Roberts-18 Apr 2019
 
“The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned; the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity.” — William Butler Yeats
 
Today (April 17) I heard a NPR “news” report that described the democratically elected president of Venezuela as “the Venezuelan dictator Maduro.” By repeating over and over that a democratically elected president is a dictator, the presstitutes create that image of Maduro in the minds of vast numbers of peoples who know nothing about Venezuela and had never heard of Maduro until he is dropped on them as “dictator.”
 
Nicolas Maduro Moros was elected president of Venezuela in 2013 and again in 2018. Previously he served as vice president and foreign minister, and he was elected to the National Assembly in 2000. Despite Washington’s propaganda campaign against him and Washington’s attempt to instigate violent street protests and Maduro’s overthrow by the Venezuelan military, whose leaders have been offered large sums of money, Maduro has the overwhelming support of the people, and the military has not moved against him.
 
What is going on is that American oil companies want to recover their control over the revenue streams from Venezuela’s vast oil reserves. Under the Bolivarian Revolution of Chavez, continued by Maduro, the oil revenues instead of departing the country have been used to reduce poverty and raise literacy inside Venezuela.
 
The opposition to Maduro inside Venezuela comes from the elites who have been traditionally allied with Washington in the looting of the country. These corrupt elites, with the CIA’s help, temporarily overthrew Chavez, but the people and the Venezuelan military secured his release and return to the presidency.
 
Washington has a long record of refusing to accept any reformist governments in Latin America. Reformers get in the way of North America’s exploitation of Latin American countries and are overthrown.
 
With the exceptions of Venezuela, Bolivia, Cuba, and Nicaragua, Latin America consists of Washington’s vassal states. In recent years Washington destroyed reform governments in Honduras, Argentina and Brazil and put gangsters in charge.
 
According to US national security adviser John Bolton, a neoconservative war monger, the governments in Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua will soon be overthrown. New sanctions have now been placed on the three countries. Washington in the typical display of its pettiness targeted sanctions against the son of the Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega. 
 
Ortega has been the leader of Nicaragua since for 40 years. He was president 1985-1990 and has been elected and reelected as president since 2006.
 
Ortega was the opponent of Somoza, Washington’s dictator in Nicaragua. Consequently he and his movement were attacked by the neoconservative operation known as Iran-Contra during the Reagan years. Ortega was a reformer. His government focused on literacy, land reform, and nationalization, which was at the expense of the wealthy ruling class. He was labeled a “Marxist-Leninist,” and Washington attempted to discredit his reforms as controversial leftist policies.
 
Somehow Castro and Ortega survived Washington’s plots against them. By the skin of his teeth so did Chavez unless you believe it was the CIA that gave him cancer. Castro and Chavez are dead. Ortega is 74. Maduro is in trouble, because Washington has stolen Venezuela’s bank deposits and cut Venezuela off the international financial system, and the British have stolen Venezuela’s gold. This makes it hard for Venezuela to pay its debts.
 
The Trump regime has branded the democratically twice-elected Maduro an “illegitimate” president. Washington has found a willing puppet, Juan Guaido to take Maduro’s place and has announced that the puppet is now the president of Venezuela. No one among the Western presstitutes or among the vassals of Washington’s empire finds it strange that an elected president is illegitimate but one picked by Washington is not.
 
Russia and China have given Maduro diplomatic support. Both have substantial investments in Venezuela that would be lost if Washington seizes the country. Russia’s support for Maduro was declared by Bolton today to be a provocation that is a threat to international peace and security. Bolton said his sanctions should be seen by Russia as a warning against providing any help for the Venezuelan government.
 
Secretary of state Mike Pompeo and vice president Pence have added their big mouths to the propaganda against the few independent governments in Latin America. Where is the shame when the highest American government officials stand up in front of the world and openly proclaim that it is official US government policy to overthrow democratically elected governments simply because those governments don’t let Americans plunder their countries.
 
How is it possible that Pompeo can announce that the “days are numbered” of the elected president of Nicaragua, who has been elected president 3 or 4 times, and the world not see the US as a rogue state that must be isolated and shunned? How can Pompeo describe Washington’s overthrow of an elected government as “setting the Nicaraguan people free?”
 
The top officials of the US government have announced that they intend to overthrow the governments of 3 countries and this is not seen as “a threat to international peace and security?”
 
How much peace and security did Washington’s overthrow of governments in Iraq, Libya, Ukraine, and the attempted overthrow of Syria bring?
 
Washington is once again openly violating international law and the rest of the world has nothing to say?
 
There is only one way to describe this: The Triumph of Evil.

No Getting Inside the Dark Heart of the Mueller Report!

IT MAY BE CALLED ‘SPY HUNTING’, BUT . . .


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by Selvam Canagaratna- 

"Treason doth never prosper: whatʼs the reason? / For if it prosper, none dare call it treason."

– Sir John Harrington, Epigrams, 1615.

Abigail Tracy, of Vanity Fair magazine, chose to disclose it up-front: Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s secret counter-intelligence findings may be the key to fully understanding the Russiagate scandal and its implications for US national security. AND YET THE PUBLIC MAY NEVER SEE THEM!

"On Friday, March 29th," wrote Abigail, ‟after a week of recriminations, soul-searching, and wide-eyed hysterics over William Barr’s four-page summary of the Mueller report, the Attorney General issued a correction of sorts. "My March 24 letter was not, and did not purport to be, an exhaustive recounting of the Special Counsel’s investigation or report," he wrote to Congress, though his letter was widely interpreted as such. Instead, Barr explained, his summary merely outlined the "principal conclusions" of the Russia probe – the "bottom line," as it were.

Mueller’s full report, Barr revealed, was nearly 400 pages long. By "mid-April, if not sooner," the public will learn why Mueller "did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities."

Or maybe not, she hinted. ‟In his letter to Congress, Barr said he is working with Mueller to make a number of redactions. There is material that "by law cannot be made public", he added; material that would compromise sensitive intelligence sources and methods; material that could affect other ongoing investigations; and information that would "unduly infringe on the personal privacy and reputational interests of peripheral third parties."

That prompted Abigail to immediately conclude: ‟This, of course, is the dark heart of the Mueller probe: classified intercepts of phone calls with the then-Russian Ambassador, secret meetings in London and the Seychelles, cryptic communications featuring Kremlin agents and a mysterious professor and Middle Eastern fixers worthy of a John le Carré novel. These are the connections that define the Russiagate conspiracy. Yet a full accounting of their linkages and significance may never be made public."

It was in May 2017, just after Donald Trump fired James Comey, that the FBI launched a counter-intelligence probe into whether Trump was under the influence of Russia against American interests. As Andrew McCabe, who was the acting head of the Bureau at the time, explained in an interview with The Atlantic, "We were concerned, and we felt like we had credible, articulable facts to indicate that a threat to national security may exist." Put simply, explained Abigail, top American intelligence officials feared that the President of the United States was acting as a Russian agent.

Many of the most astonishing episodes involving Trump or his associates colluding with Russian agents, explained Abigail, are in the public record. On the campaign trail, Trump called for Russian hackers to target Hillary Clinton; his son, son-in-law, and campaign manager met with a Kremlin-linked attorney at Trump Tower to secure "high-level and sensitive information" on Clinton, as part of what they were told was "Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump."

During the White House transition, there was a flurry of contacts between Trumpworld and Moscow, including an effort by Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner to establish a secret back channel with the Kremlin. Later, as President, Trump bragged about firing Comey to Russian officials in the Oval Office, sought out private meetings with Putin, and has sided with Russian intelligence over the assessments of his own agencies.

According to the Special-Counsel guidelines set forth by the Justice Department, Mueller was only required to provide an explanation to the Attorney General for why he did or did not decide to bring indictments against various targets in his probe.

Mueller’s mandate, as defined by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, was to investigate "any links and/or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with the campaign of President Donald Trump." But Barr’s memo to Congress only said the Special Counsel’s investigation "did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities." He did not address "links" more broadly. And these "links" might tell a different tale of ‘collusionʼ. The absence of a criminal conspiracy does not mean that Trump or his associates were not unwittingly aiding the Russian government in its election interference, or that they are not still compromised.

Added Abigail: ‟Intelligence veterans I spoke with cautioned that the American public may never learn what Mueller uncovered in his counter-intelligence investigation. "This is spy-hunting, and the American public doesn’t need to know who the FBI is investigating until it is brought into the public arena, which is the criminal courts, because that could expose procedures and practices, and may be used to alert other people on how the FBI conducts business," they told me. Counter-intelligence investigations will often rely on secret intelligence obtained through warrants issued under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which is different than a criminal warrant. "It is not a criminal charge – again, it is intelligence . . . And when that information is put out in the public, that sort of hurts the FBI’s ability to do their job."

Mueller’s counter-intelligence findings are expected to be shared with a select group of lawmakers known as the ‘Gang of Eight’ – the leaders of the House and the Senate, and the chairmen and ranking members of the intelligence committees. Robert Grant, a former FBI agent and friend of Mueller, told Abigail the FBI would likely present "an oral briefing without a written report, and try to answer the questions the leadership of both parties might have" about the investigation. From that, the Gang of Eight might learn "how deep, in this case, the Russians may have been – what are their techniques and practices? How are they targeting people? Who are they targeting?" If there is a national-security threat, lawmakers need to know.

Whether Mueller’s counter-intelligence findings will see the light of day beyond the ‘Gang of Eight’ is unclear. But Democrats, for their part, are prepared to fight for it. Hours after Barr announced Friday that he was making "the redactions that are required" before the public release of the report, House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerrold Nadler responded by demanding more. "Congress requires the full and complete Mueller report, without redactions, as well as access to the underlying evidence, by April 2," he wrote. "That deadline still stands."

That may be a tall order, given the sensitivities involved. But Democrats are prepared to point to precedents set during the Watergate scandal and the Ken Starr investigation to support their push for total transparency, without redactions, including all the grand-jury material that the Special Counsel collected over the course of his investigation. They will also seek to exploit the precedents set earlier in the Trump administration, when Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee compelled the Justice Department to turn over hundreds of thousands of pages of sensitive investigatory records and evidence related to the Clinton e-mail investigation and the Mueller probe, including FISA applications and renewals.

"The President has repeatedly sought to interfere in this investigation," a Democratic staffer told Abigail. "And if the Department fails to make the Mueller report public in its entirety and turn over the underlying evidence to Congress, it may

be actively facilitating a cover-up."

Capitalism in crisis: U.S. billionaires worry about the survival of the system that made them rich

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) walks toward his car after a Bernie Sanders rally in San Francisco. (Nick Otto/For The Washington Post)


Khamenei names new chief for Iran's Revolutionary Guards

FILE PHOTO: Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks live on television after casting his ballot in the Iranian presidential election in Tehran June 12, 2009. REUTERS/Caren Firouz/File Photo

Parisa Hafezi-APRIL 21, 2019

DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran’s top authority Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has replaced the head of the influential Revolutionary Guards Corps, state TV reported on Sunday, days after the United States designated the elite group a foreign terrorist organisation.

The TV station did not give a reason for the change when it announced the appointment of Brigadier General Hossein Salami to the position and his promotion to the rank of Major General. He
served as deputy commander of the Guards for years and is known for his hardline comments against Israel and the United States.

“The Supreme Leader has appointed Salami as the new commander-in-chief of the Guards, who will replace Mohammad Ali Jafari,” it said.

Major General Jafari had held the post since September 2007.

President Donald Trump on April 8 designated the Guards a terrorist organisation, in an unprecedented step that drew Iranian condemnation and raised concerns about retaliatory attacks on U.S. forces. The designation took effect on April 15.

Tehran retaliated by naming the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) as a terrorist organisation and the U.S. government as a sponsor of terrorism.

On April 13, Salami was quoted by Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency as saying that he and the IRGC were proud of being designated a terrorist group by Washington.

POLITICAL CLOUT

The IRGC, created by late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini during Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, is more than a military force. It is also an industrial empire with political clout and is loyal to the supreme leader.

Comprising an estimated 125,000-strong military with army, navy and air units, the Guards also command the Basij, a religious volunteer paramilitary force, and control Iran’s missile programmes.

The Guards’ overseas Quds forces have fought Iran’s proxy wars in the region.

The IRGC is in charge of Iran’s ballistic missile and nuclear programs. Tehran has warned that it has missiles with a range of up to 2,000 kms (1,242 miles), putting Israel and U.S. military bases in the region within reach.

Salami, born in 1960, said in January that Iran’s strategy was to wipe “the Zionist regime” (Israel) off the political map, Iran’s state TV reported.

“We announce that if Israel takes any action to wage a war against us, it will definitely lead to its own elimination,” Salami said after an Israeli attack on Iranian targets in Syria in January, Iranian media reported.

Israel sees Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes as a threat to its existence. Iran says its nuclear work is for peaceful purposes only.

Israel, which Islamic Iran refuses to recognise, backed Trump’s move in May to quit a 2015 international deal on Iran’s nuclear programme and welcomed Washington’s reimposition of sanctions on Tehran.

Writing by Parisa Hafezi; editing by William Maclean and Emelia Sithole-Matarise

Polls focus in world’s largest democracies

Voting at the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.
Voting at the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Saturday, April 20, 2019

While much of the world’s media attention remains largely drawn to the Notre-Dame disaster in Paris, France, two of the world’s and Asia’s largest democracies, India and Indonesia, made strides in their electoral processes this week.

In India, on Tuesday this week, campaigning ended for the second phase of the 17th Lok Sabha election in 97 constituencies, spread over 12 States and a Union Territory. This phase involves all voting in 39 constituencies of Tamil Nadu, 14 in Karnataka, 10 in Maharashtra, eight in Uttar Pradesh, five each in Assam, Bihar and Odisha, 3 each in Chhattisgarh and West Bengal, two in Jammu and Kashmir and one each in Manipur, Tripura and Puducherry.

In what is the world’s biggest exercise in electoral democracy, the Indian electorate has over 900 million voters, compared to 830 million in 2014. The number of seats in the Lok Sabha – the Lower House of parliament – is 545, and the electoral winner needs to find a majority here from a single party or coalition. There are 1 million polling stations in the country.

The Election Commission of India’s latest data on political parties, registered till March 9, a day before the Lok Sabha elections were announced, shows the country having a total of 2,293 political parties. Of these, 149 political parties were registered between February and March on the eve of the announcement of the current elections. Counting of all votes cast since April 11 will take place after all seven phases of voting, on May 23.

In 2014, the BJP won 282 seats in the Lok Sabha, the largest majority commanded by a single party in 30 years. With its allies, the party easily passed the 300 mark, indicating the popularity of its leader Narendra Modi, who became Prime Minister, and seeks re-election in this poll.

Campaigning continues in all other regions with increasingly bitter political rivalry, mainly between the current ruling Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP) and its Hindutva allies, and the Opposition Congress Party, with its own allies. While the BJP remains in the lead as seen by opinion polls and noticeable public support, the Congress and its allies are certainly gaining considerable ground in recent weeks.

Another factor is the role of regional parties in several states in India, both supportive and opposed to the ruling BJP. Many analysts see this as a new trend in Indian polls, with the regional parties moving towards a greater say in national politics.

In a new move of increasing interest, The Election Commission has begun imposing Electoral Restrictions, preventing some leading party candidates from both Government and Opposition parties, participating in politic activity for some days in the current campaign, for allegedly violating the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) by political parties and candidates.

Such restrictions have imposed restrictions on campaigning by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister BJP’s Yogi Adityanath, BSP leader Mayawati, SP leader Azam Khan and Union Minister Maneka Gandhi. Several more cases of such violations of the MCC continue to emerge as campaigning gains momentum for the third phase in 115 constituencies across 12 States and two Union Territories on April 23.

The Elections Commission has also imposed a ban on the use of the country’s security forces, and their image by candidates at this election. Prime Minister Modi and key leaders of the BJP have been pulled up in this regard.

Mr. Modi’s campaign speeches continue to focus on national security and nationalism, and increasing attacks of the ‘family bandyism’ of the Gandhis, while the Congress is seeking to build momentum around its manifesto promise of minimum income guarantee, justice for the people, rising unemployment, and attacks on alleged corruption of the Modi/BJP regime.

Indonesia

After the polling in Indonesia on Wednesday 17th, President Joko Widodo looks to be on course for re-election, according to unofficial results released after the polls closed, in the world’s largest one-day poll.

Mr. Widodo has a lead of about 10% over his rival, the ex-general Prabowo Subianto, seen as a lead that would remain in most areas.

Official results are due in May, but the so-called “quick counts” - undertaken by polling companies - have proved correct in previous years.

Indonesia voted on Wednesday in one of the world’s largest one-day elections. More than 192 million people were eligible to cast their ballot to select 20,000 local and national lawmakers, including the president, in the world’s largest Muslim country.

This presidential race is seen as a re-match of the 2014 contest between Mr. Widodo and Mr. Prabowo, who both made political moves in line with the increased prominence of conservative Islam in the country.

Mr. Joko Widodo, is the son of a wood-seller, and later furniture-maker began his political career with the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDIP) when he was elected mayor of Solo in 2005. He then ran to be Jakarta’s governor, winning a resounding victory in 2012.

Mr. Subianto Prabowo, an Indonesian businessman, politician and former Lieutenant General of the Indonesian Army, was narrowly defeated by Mr. Widodo in the last presidential election in 2014.
A BBC poll, conducted by Kompas, puts Mr. Widodo’s share of the sample ballot counted so far at 54%, while his rival has 45%. A number of other private polling companies are reporting similar outcomes. However, Mr. Prabowo has told reporters his team’s own data shows him ahead, with more than 50% of the vote.

Notre-Dame

The world was stunned by the tragedy in France this week. Notre-Dame Cathedral is considered one of the finest examples of French Gothic architecture and an emblem of the nation.

As fire raged at the cathedral on Monday, thousands of Parisians poured on to the streets to sadly watch the possible destruction of the monument that has come to largely symbolise the history, faith and national unity of the French people. Notre-Dame in many ways mirrors the history of Europe and has been the site of landmark moments in the continent’s history.

In 1239, King Louis IX -- later canonized Saint Louis -- placed the famous “Crown of Thorns” – believed to be a part of the crown of thorns placed in Christ’s head during the crucifixion - in Notre-Dame.

During the medieval period, the cathedral was the site of several royal marriages and requiems, including the marriage of Mary Queen of Scots and the French crown prince Francis, who later became King Francis II. The French Revolution sparked a desecration of the church, when much of its religious imagery was damaged or destroyed. It however remained a central site in French religious and political life. It was in Notre-Dame that Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself emperor of France.

French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed it will be rebuilt ‘even more beautifully, and the work will be done within five years. So far more than US $ 1,000 million has been pledged by a number of companies and business tycoons to help rebuild the site. The European Union is expected to make a major contribution, and several other countries are also likely to extend support.

Importantly, the fire occurred during the Christian Holy Week preceding Easter and for worshippers, many analysts believe the renovation effort will be seen as a metaphor for the one of the central tenets of Christianity: the Resurrection. Apart from this spiritual thinking, the fire and Notre-Dame could also bring more strength to President Macron and France in the coming elections to the European Parliament in May this year. It will elect more than 750 members from the 28 member states (which will include the UK). The Notre-Dame tragedy could give strength to Macron’s anti-populist campaign in European politics.

Julian Assange and Media Freedom

The arrest of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, after his seven year refuge at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, has caused new political differences in the UK and raised much concern on media freedom, especially in the USA.

The Labour leadership in the UK has called on Theresa May’s Conservative Government to block Assange’s extradition to the USA, after his arrest on behalf of US authorities, who have charged him with involvement in a computer hacking conspiracy.

Assange’s lawyers confirmed that US prosecutors have 65 days to submit a full set of charges, raising the prospect of additional criminal allegations being introduced that would result in a far longer sentence.

In a statement issued on Friday, his legal team confirmed he would resist the extradition which sets a “dangerous precedent where any journalist could face US charges for publishing truthful information about the United States”.

His Australian lawyer has said “the United States has a practice of extraditing people and then loading up the indictment with further charges. It is hard to imagine that the grand jury would have sat for 10 years, and they’ve spent millions of dollars on this matter, and they simply charge him with an offence which carries a maximum penalty of only five years.”

The computer hacking charge is related to his help to US Army Intelligence Analyst Chelsea Manning (now Ms. Manning) to break into US government computers in 2010. It was Chelsea Manning who exposed several war crimes by the US in Iraq and Afghanistan, especially the helicopter fired killing of several, including two journalists, in Baghdad, Iraq.

Many Journalists Rights and Media Freedom organisations in the world, including the USA and UK, are concerned about the threat to Media Freedom from the possibility of his being extradited to the USA on the said charges.

It is also reported that Sweden is reviewing whether to reactivate its extradition case against Assange over a sexual assault allegation in 2010; Assange denies these charges. If it becomes a question of whether the US or Swedish requests take priority, the UK Home Secretary Sajid Javid has the legal authority to decide.


Notre Dame Cathedral fire.

Ukraine’s Runoff Election Is More Than a Contest of Personalities

It is hard for the country to move West with Russia on its back.

Incumbent Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, left, and his challenger for the presidency, Volodymyr Zelensky, debate at the Olimpiyskiy stadium in Kiev on April 19.Incumbent Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, left, and his challenger for the presidency, Volodymyr Zelensky, debate at the Olimpiyskiy stadium in Kiev on April 19.

No photo description available.
BY 
 |  Ukrainians on Sunday will choose their next president in a runoff vote.

The international media has largely focused on the horse race between the incumbent, Petro Poroshenko, and the actor Volodymyr Zelensky, who so compellingly plays an incorruptible president in an acclaimed television drama that he now leads in the polls for the actual office. But much more is at stake than a contest of personalities.

Among the post-Soviet satellite republics, Ukraine has the largest population and the most strategic importance. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s effort to reconstitute the Russian Empire will not work if Ukraine continues to move toward the West. The deepening of Ukrainian democracy also represents a mortal threat to Putin’s authoritarian rule at home: If Ukrainians, with all their ties to Russia, can hold their leaders accountable through democratic institutions and depose them in free elections, why can’t Russians?

Polling by the International Republican Institute, which is participating in international election observation missions deployed to monitor the vote, shows that Ukrainians overwhelmingly want to be part of Europe rather than oriented towards Russia. As Mayor of Kiev Vitali Klitschko told me, “We grew up under Soviet rule. We suffered from it. Why would we want to go back to it?”

When the Soviet Union collapsed, Ukraine was richer than neighboring Poland. Poland is now some three times richer than Ukraine measured by income per capita, with world-class infrastructure and a sophisticated economy subsidized by European Union investment. By contrast, in Ukraine, corrupt politicians, weak institutions, and Russian subversion have stymied growth.

It is hard for Ukraine to move West with Russia on its back. Five years ago, the then-pro-Russian president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych, abruptly canceled an association agreement with the European Union. Ukrainians took to the streets by the millions to demand their leader uphold Ukraine’s European destiny and to oppose his efforts to pivot to Moscow. The corrupt Yanukovych ultimately fled the country for exile in Russia.

That was Ukraine’s second democratic revolution since independence from Moscow, and not the last time Ukraine’s politicians let down its citizens. Ukraine does not need more street revolutions—it needs politicians to put citizens’ welfare above their own. But oligarchs who control substantial media and business empires, and who have manipulated public office for private gain, have traditionally dominated Ukraine’s political system/

International Republican Institute surveys consistently show that voters’ top concerns are the war against Russia in the east of the country followed by corruption and the economy. The Russian occupation has distorted Ukraine’s politics. Since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014, more than 10,000 Ukrainians have been killed in a war that has now lasted longer than World War I.

Russian forces occupy Crimea on Ukraine’s Black Sea coast. Russian-sponsored forces control the Donbass, a vast area in Eastern Ukraine. Last November, after the Russian navy partially blockaded coastal areas that are Ukraine’s economic lifeline, Poroshenko, with parliament’s backing, temporarily declared martial law—such was the threat to his country’s integrity. Ukraine is spending heavily on its defense. As a result, per capita incomes have dropped since the Russian invasion, further discrediting political leaders among a public living in what has become the poorest country in Europe.

The Kremlin assault on Ukraine continues not just on the front lines of the Donbass but in cyberspace. In Ukraine’s last presidential election, in 2014, Russian hackers took down the election commission’s website in an effort to disrupt and discredit the vote. Russian propaganda and disinformation have been rife during the Ukrainian presidential campaign, a problem amplified by the fact that many Ukrainians speak Russian, blurring the line between domestic media and foreign propaganda.

Fake news sponsored by Moscow targets not only Ukrainian voters but also, in different forms, Ukraine’s allies in the West: If the Kremlin can convince U.S. and European leaders that Ukraine is a divided country and failed state, Moscow can erode support for Western assistance to and cooperation with Ukraine, furthering Moscow’s strategic interests in trapping the country in Europe’s gray zone beyond NATO’s borders.

Sunday’s election marks a first: Every previous Ukrainian presidential contest has pitted a pro-Russian leader against a pro-Western one. But the Kremlin’s assault on Ukraine since 2014 has backfired. In a break from the past, neither of the leading presidential candidates promises a closer relationship with Moscow. Ukrainians overwhelmingly want to move West, and both candidates say they want to anchor Ukraine in the free world, not in Russia’s orbit.

Voters’ disgust with Ukraine’s political class could produce a surprise. Zelensky is an actor who plays a president, and on screen, he indignantly stands up to corrupt politicians and fights for citizens’ rights against those of oligarchic elites. Ukrainians are so hungry for change that he is leading in many polls, despite his lack of experience in politics.

Whoever wins this election, the United States has a compelling interest in supporting the Ukrainian people’s aspirations to live in a country that is not governed by corrupt politicians who answer to oligarchs, that through good governance can finally catch up to European levels of prosperity, and that finally escapes the Soviet shadow through partnership with the European Union and NATO.
Much is at stake, for Ukraine and the West: The front line in the struggle between the free world and Putin’s shadow empire lies in Ukraine, and its people are clear about which side they are on.

Two teenagers arrested over killing of journalist Lyra McKee


Two teenagers have been detained under anti-terror laws in connection with the death of the journalist Lyra McKee, who was shot in the head during disturbances on Thursday night in Londonderry.
Detectives suspect they are members of the dissident Republican New IRA – and warned there was a “new breed of terrorist” coming through the ranks.

Jallianwala Bagh massacre 100 years on


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General-Reginald-Dyer

by Rajeewa Jayaweera- 

As Sri Lanka prepared to celebrate the Sinhala and Tamil New Year last week, an atrocity which took place in neighboring India one hundred years ago passed almost unnoticed other than perhaps in Amritsar and surrounding areas.

Jallianwala Bagh is a public garden of six to seven acres, walled on all sides with five entrances located in Amritsar in the Punjab of undivided British India. On April 13, 1919, the British massacred over 1,000 unarmed civilians including women and children.

Background

British India contributed massively to the British war effort during WWI by way of men and material, a policy endorsed by Mahatma Gandhi himself though opposed by Indian nationalists such as Subhash Chandra Bose. Millions of Indians fought as soldiers and worked as laborers in Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. In return, Indians expected dominion status, already enjoyed by countries such as Australia, Canada, and South Africa, once the war was over.

Fueled by the pan-Indian mutiny in the British Indian army, the Punjab and Bengal became hotbeds of anti-colonial activities. It resulted in the passing of Defense of India Act 1915 limiting civil and political liberties. The Rowlatt Act passed in 1919 further infringed on civil rights and political activities. It precipitated large scale unrest across the sub-continent.

Prelude

The situation in Punjab deteriorated rapidly with rail, telegraph and communication systems being disrupted cutting off Amritsar from the rest of India and the world. On April 10, 1919, there was a protest at the residence of the Deputy Commissioner of Amritsar, a city in Punjab. The demonstration was to demand the release of two popular leaders who had been earlier arrested by the government and moved to a secret location. British troops opened fire killing over a dozen protestors resulting in British establishments being attacked and the killing of five British civilians in retaliation.

On April 11, Marcella Sherwood, a British missionary, while cycling through a narrow street was caught by a mob, pulled to the ground by her hair, stripped naked, beaten, kicked, and left for dead. She was rescued by some local Indians and smuggled to safety. After visiting Sherwood on April 19, the local commander, Colonel Reginald Dyer (Acting Brigadier General), issued an order requiring every Indian man using that street to crawl its length on his hands and knees. 

He later explained to a British inspector: "Some Indians crawl face downwards in front of their gods. I wanted them to know that a British woman is as sacred as a Hindu god and therefore they have to crawl in front of her, too." Marcella Sherwood, despite her status of a messenger of God later defended Colonel Dyer, describing him "as the savior of Punjab." By April 13, most of Punjab was under Martial Law.

The Massacre

In the morning of April 13, Dyer issued a proclamation in English, Hindi, Urdu, and Punjabi announcing a curfew from 8 p.m. Meanwhile, a large crowd had gathered at the Jallianwala Bagh near the Sikh holy shrine Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple) to celebrate the Sikh festival ‘Baisakhi.’

Other than the pilgrims, the Baisakhi festival had also drawn large numbers of farmers and traders attending the annual horse and cattle fair in the vicinity. The Police without warning closed the fair at 2 p.m. The crowd at the Jallianwala Bagh by mid-afternoon was estimated between 15,000 and 20,000.

At 4.30 p.m., Dyer arrived at the location with 90 Sikh, Gurkha, Balushi and Rajput soldiers from the 2nd/9th Gurkha Rifles, the 54th Sikhs and the 59th Sindh Rifles, fifty .303 Lee Enfield Bolt Action Rifles and two armored cars mounted with machine guns. The armored vehicles had to be kept outside as they could not move through the narrow entrances to the Bagh.

Without requesting the crowd to disperse, he had the main exits blocked before ordering his troops to open fire at the crowd. Firing into the crowd continued uninterrupted for ten minutes. A cease-fire order was issued when most of the ammunition supplies had been exhausted. By that time, 1,650 rounds had been spent.

Causalities

Despite efforts made by the British administration in India to suppress the massacre, news spread across India resulting in even moderates being outraged. News of the massacre finally reached Britain in December 1919.

The Hunter Commission appointed by the British government to investigate the massacre confirmed the death of 337 men, 41 boys, and a six-week-old baby with another 1,500 injured.

The Congress declared 1,500 causalities with approximately 1,000 dead.

Besides those killed by soldiers firing into the crown, other deaths took place in the ensuing stampede and due to the jumping into a nearby well to escape bullets. A plaque found even today states 120 bodies had been removed from the well on the following day. Some of the wounded died during the night as they could not be removed and taken to hospital due to a curfew imposed by Dyer.

Had the two armored cars gained access to the confined area, the death toll would have risen considerably as admitted by Dyer under cross-examination by a member of the Hunter Commission.

Aftermath

Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill called the episode "monstrous" in the House of Commons while privately stating Dyer’s action amounted to murder or at least manslaughter. Prime Minister H. H. Asquith called it "one of the worst outrages in the whole of our history."

Dyer, declining legal counsel, explained his conduct to the Hunter Commission, "I think it quite possible that I could have dispersed the crowd without firing but they would have come back again and laughed, and I would have made, what I consider, a fool of myself. He further stated he did not make any effort to tend to the wounded after the shooting: "Certainly not. It was not my job. Hospitals were open, and they could have gone there." The Commission members failed to question him how those suffering from fatal gunshot wounds could go to hospital unassisted.

Heavily criticized both in Britain and India, he was relieved of his command, asked to resign his Commission and informed he would not be reemployed. He retired on July 17, 1920.

Nevertheless, the British in India saw Dyer as the savior of the Raj.

Shortly thereafter, suffering from Jaundice and arteriosclerosis, Dyer returned to Britain. The Morning Post, a conservative, pro-imperialist newspaper which later merged with the Daily Telegraph set up a fund which collected GBP 26,000 (GBP 1.15 mil in today’s money).The Morning Post had supported Dyer’s action on the grounds that the massacre was necessary to "Protect the honor of European Women." When he died in 1927, he was given an unofficial state funeral with his coffin draped in the Union Jack and born on a gun carriage through Admiralty Arch.

In contrast, dependents of those killed by the British Raj were given Indian Rs 500 (GBP 176 in today’s money).

Michael O’Dwyer, Lieutenant Governor of Punjab in April 1919 and had supported the Defense of India Act 1915 was murdered at Caxton Hall in London on March 13, 1940, by Udham Singh, an Indian independence activist who had witnessed the events in Amritsar and had himself been wounded. He shot and killed O’Dwyer who he believed was the planner of Dyer’s action.

On July 31 1940, Singh was hanged for the murder of O’Dwyer.

It was a classic display of British sense of justice and fair play of one man ordering the firing into an unarmed crowd resulting in the death of over 1,000 men women and children walking free and another hung by his neck for assassinating the chief planner of the massacre of 1,000 men, women and children.

Inability to say ‘we are sorry’

In 1997, Queen Elizabeth II became the first monarch to visit the massacre site. Despite signing the visitor’s book, no apology was made, making a mockery of Britain’s current policy of demanding Truth-Telling, Accountability and a proper closure in trouble spots elsewhere.

Her consort Prince Philip, seeing a memorial for 2,000 martyred Indians suggested Indians had manipulated the figures. He stated: "That’s wrong, I was in the navy with Dyer’s son."

Former British Prime Minister David Cameron visiting the site in 2013 to pay his respects said it was a "deeply shameful event" but felt he could not "reach back into history" to apologize.

Before and After

History is strewn with atrocities committed the world over by the British and other colonial powers such as the French, Portuguese, Dutch, Spanish, Belgians of incidents such as the Jallianwala Bagh massacre.

Atrocities committed by the British during the Uva Wellassa uprising 1817/18 in Sri Lanka, the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya 1952/60 are but two such examples.

Only Germany and Japan, both losers in WWII have had the moral courage to apologize for their atrocities.