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Sunday, April 01, 2012

சியெரலியோனில் சர்வதேச சமூகம் கட்டவிழ்த்த பயங்கரம்!



சியெரலியோனில் சர்வதேச சமூகம் கட்டவிழ்த்த பயங்கரம்!
“THE EMPIRE IN AFRICA” [full movie]


இலங்கையில் `சர்வதேச சமூகத்`  தலையீட்டைத் தோற்கடிப்போம்!

 

பக்ச பாசிச சிங்களத்தைத்  தோற்கடிக்க.

உழைக்கும் மலையக முஸ்லிம் சிங்கள மக்களுடன் ஐக்கியப்படுவோம்!

 

உலகத் தொழிலாளர்களுடனும் ஒடுக்கப்பட்ட தேசங்களுடனும் ஒன்றுபடுவோம்!

Friday, March 30, 2012

Dr.Hans Blix discusses Iran's nuclear programme and how to stop


Few men have spent more time at the intersection of nuclear
weapons and international politics than Swedish diplomat Hans
Blix.

As the former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) and then chief United Nations weapons inspector, Blix
was at the centre of events when he publicly contradicted
claims from the administration of former US president George W
Bush that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction (WMD). It was an
assessment the US pushed aside.

Blix also accused the British government of dramatising the
threat of weapons in Iraq in order to strengthen its case for
joining the 2003 war against Saddam Hussein. No stockpiles of
weapons of mass destruction were ever found.

In his 2004 book Disarming Iraq, Blix gives an account of the
events and inspections before the coalition began its invasion.

"I am sorry for the way it went because we failed, and if we had persuaded the UN Security Council and persuaded the world, then there might not have been a war," he said.

Recent talk about a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear installations has made Blix concerned about a repeat of the events that led to the Iraq war.

"When I hear [Israeli Prime Minister] Netanyahu saying it’s not a question of days or weeks, but also not years, I think that sounds like a terrible threat," he says.

In this interview with Al Jazeera, Blix discusses Iran's nuclear programme and how to stop what he calls a "legally unjustified" attack against Tehran. Is Iran trying to develop a nuclear weapon? Is an Israeli attack on Iran coming?

PFLP offers condolences on the death of Sudanese Communist Leader Mohammed Ibrahim Nagud

Tens of thousands of members and  supporters of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine gathered on December 11, 2010, in Gaza City’s Palestine Stadium, marking the forty-third anniversary of the PFLP’s founding in a mass rally.

PFLP offers condolences on the death of Sudanese Communist
leader Mohammed Ibrahim Nugud
Mar 24 2012

Comrade Ghazi Sourani, director of the Cultural Department of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, delivered condolences to the Sudanese Communist Party on behalf of the PFLP upon the death of its General Secretary, Mohammed Ibrahim Nugud, on March 22, 2012.



Nugud passed after a life of struggle and great sacrifice for progress in the Sudan and the development of democracy. He was part of the resistance to colonialism, and continued that
resistance against successive dictatorships, having been arrested and tortured several times, always remaining a voice of party unity and struggle. He was elected several times to the Sudanese parliament and was a member of the multi-party parliament overthrown in a coup in 1989.

The Front said that he remained loyal throughout his life to the principles of his party, was a solid fighter and a modest man who struggled all his life for democracy, liberation, revolution and socialism.

பாலஸ்தீனர்களின் `தாய் மண் ` தினத்தில் இஸ்ரேல் படை காடைத்தனம்


Clashes as Palestinians mark 'Land Day'

Israeli security forces use water cannon and tear gas in clashes with protesters at flashpoint Qalandiya checkpoint.

Last Modified: 30 Mar 2012 14:35 Al Jazzera

Israeli security forces have fired rubber coated bullets, tear gas and stun grenades to break up groups of Palestinian demonstrators in the occupied West Bank as annual Land Day rallies turned violent.

At least 121 people have been injured in clashes at the Qalandiya checkpoint on the outskirts of Jerusalem on Friday, mostly from tear gas inhalation, medical sources told Al Jazeera.

Palestinian activists have called for a "Global March to Jerusalem" to mark the day when Israeli Arabs protest against government policies that they say has stripped them of land.

Five medical workers were also reported to have been shot with rubber coated bullets and one car was set ablaze.

Al Jazeera's Cal Perry reported that Israeli security forces tried to push hundreds of protesters back toward the nearby West Bank town of Ramallah, using water cannon and tear gas.

Rocks were thrown, tyres set alight and Red Crescent ambulances could be seen at the scene.

"This is a place where we frequently see clashes, and what we're seeing here is the Israeli army needing to put a barrier up and not let people through," our correspondent said.

"These clashes seem to be a bit more fierce today, and have started earlier in the day than usual."

Access limited
Medics in the Gaza Strip said the Israelis also used live fire to prevent protesters from nearing the frontier wall, seriously wounding one man.

Israeli forces were put on high alert at frontier crossings with Lebanon and Syria, but there were no reports of anyone nearing the border fences, unlike last year when several demonstrators were killed in separate protests.

Israeli mounted policemen dispersed Palestinian protesters during clashes in East Jerusalem [AFP]
 
However, violence flared at checkpoints in the West Bank to the north and south of Jerusalem.

Witnesses also reported disturbances at gates leading into the Old City, with police limiting access to the Muslims' revered al-Aqsa Mosque.

A Reuters news agency reporter saw two men being carried away injured after scuffles at Jerusalem's Lions' Gate, while police said they had made five arrests at the Damascus Gate.

Jerusalem is a focal point of conflict, as Palestinians want the city's eastern sector, captured by Israel in a 1967 war, as capital of a future state.

Israel has annexed East Jerusalem as part of its capital and insists the city remain united.

Six UN Security Council resolutions have denounced or declared invalid Israel's control of the city.

"We are determined to march together toward Jerusalem, and hopefully we will break through and reach it," said a masked youth, calling himself Rimawi, as he faced off against soldiers
in Ramallah.



Flag-waving crowds neared the Qalandiya crossing out of  Ramallah, some of them hurling stones at the security forces, but were forced back when border police sprayed them with foul smelling liquid from a water cannon.

There were also confrontations in Bethlehem, where Palestinians hurled petrol bombs at an Israeli watchtower.

Other events were held in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, were at least three people were wounded in clashes with the Israeli border police, medical sources told Al Jazeera.

Border fears
Land Day commemorates the killing by security forces of six Arabs in 1976 during protests against government plans to confiscate land in northern Israel's Galilee region.

Previous remembrances have mostly passed quietly, but Israel decided to reinforce its defences following deadly clashes along the Lebanese and Syrian borders in May that appeared to
catch the military off guard.

Palestinian organisers called for peaceful rallies against "the policies and practices of the racist Zionist state" and said solidarity protests were planned in some 80 nations.

"When crowds from 80 countries move towards Jerusalem, they send a strong message to the Israeli occupation that no one can accept what they are doing in Jerusalem," Ismail Haniyeh, the
Gaza leader of the Islamic group Hamas, said.



Israel is wary of growing unrest in the occupied Palestinian Territories, with peace talks stalled for months and Palestinian leaders refusing to return to the negotiating table until Israel halts all Jewish settlement building in the West Bank.

Leading Palestinian activist Marwan Barghouti, serving multiple life sentences in an Israeli jail for orchestrating suicide attacks, called on Monday for a new wave of civil resistance in
the decades-long quest for statehood.

On high alert along its borders, police were also wary of possible friction within the boundaries of Israel, where the Arab minority was planning protests.

Arabs make up about a fifth of Israel's total population. Many complain of discrimination.
==============

சிங்களத்தின்,`இராணுவக்குடியிருப்பு, பெளத்த மடாலய அமைப்பு, மாவட்ட எல்லை மாற்றம், தேர்தல் தொகுதி எல்லை மாற்றம், மும்மொழித்திட்டம், சிங்களக் குடியேற்றம்` அனைத்தும் இஸ்ரேல் பாணி நிலப்பறிப்பும், தேசிய நிலத் தொடர்ச்சி அறுப்புமேயாகும்.

இஸ்ரேலுக்கு பாலஸ்தீனத்தை தீனிபோடும் ஒபாமா , ஈழத்தை  சிங்களத்திடமிருந்து  காக்க உதவமாட்டான்!
==============

இராணுவமயமாகும் சிங்களத்துக்கு ஆயுதம் விற்கும் `அமைதியை விரும்பும்` ஒபாமா!

US Eases Restrictions on Sri Lanka Defense Sales
WASHINGTON March 23, 2012 (AP)

The U.S. has eased restrictions on defense sales to Sri Lanka to allow exports of equipment for aerial and maritime surveillance.

The State Department enacted the changes Thursday, just as the U.N. Human Rights Council urged Sri Lanka to investigate allegations of war crimes during its civil conflict that ended
in 2009.

The department said the two developments were unrelated.
It may, however, help ease strains in the bilateral relationship. The U.S. proposed the resolution approved by the U.N. human rights body.

The export restrictions date back to the start of the civil conflict in the 1980s. The new exceptions allow exports, on a case-by-case basis, of equipment such as unarmed patrol boats, light aircraft, cameras, and related components.

Euro Zone Raises Crisis Firewall Ceiling to €700 Billion


Euro Zone Raises Crisis Firewall Ceiling to €700 Billion .By MATTHEW DALTON WSJ

COPENHAGEN—Euro-zone finance ministers on Friday agreed to boost the bloc's bailout lending limit to €700 billion ($930 billion), choosing the least ambitious option on the table for reinforcing its anticrisis "firewall," one some in Europe fear won't be enough to prevent a reawakening of the region's financial turmoil.

After several months of relative calm, tensions are returning to the European government bond markets. Yields on Italian and Spanish debt are rising, as the effects of the European Central Bank's huge infusions of cheap bank funding, which started in December, appear to be waning. Financial markets, governments in the Group of 20 and the International Monetary Fund have been pressing for a convincing increase of the bailout capacity to prevent the crisis from returning in full force.
But Germany, the euro zone's paymaster, beat back lobbying for a more ambitious increase of the bloc's two bailout funds, which have been capped at €500 billion. The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, backed by the euro zone's weaker economies, had argued that raising the lending cap to €940 billion would offer a convincing response to the crisis.

The expansion option chosen by finance ministers at their meeting here Friday will have to be ratified by the 17 euro-zone member parliaments.

In a paper circulated to euro-zone officials last week, the commission wrote that the lower funding level "could be viewed as maintaining the status quo, which both G-20 partners and the markets consider as inadequate. In that context, this option is likely to fall short of providing the necessary credibility to unlock an increase in IMF resources."

Euro-zone governments hope the move will be enough to encourage governments from the Group of 20 nations to contribute more resources to the IMF for anticrisis lending. The G-20 nations have been holding back their contributions pending a bigger commitment from the euro zone itself. Euro-zone governments have already pledged an additional €150 billion for the IMF's global crisis-fighting resources, hoping that other governments will follow suit.

"I welcome the decision of euro-area ministers to strengthen the European firewall," IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said. But the final decision about giving more resources to the fund will rest with its member governments.

Friday's decision appears unlikely to end financial-market skepticism about the euro zone's commitment to finance its weaker governments, particularly if the region's economic health continues to deteriorate, said Credit Suisse interest-rate strategist Helen Haworth.

"If the data is bad on the economic side, then you've got an environment where are people are saying, 'We've got this firewall. Is it big enough?' Maybe, maybe not," Ms. Haworth said.


The euro zone's bailout capacity is determined by the interplay between the European Financial Stability Facility, the bloc's €440 billion temporary bailout fund, and its permanent successor, the €500 billion European Stability Mechanism, due to come into operation in July.

The EFSF has already pledged to lend about €200 billion to Greece, Ireland and Portugal. Until Friday's decision is ratified, those loans would be subtracted from the ESM's €500 billion loan capacity, giving the bloc just over €300 billion for future bailouts, far short of what would be required to finance Italy and Spain, should they need it.

The ministers' decision will raise the cap of the two funds to €700 billion beginning in July 2012, the launch date of the ESM, ensuring that €500 billion is available for future bailouts.

They also decided to accelerate capital payments into the ESM—€32 billion will be paid this year, the same amount next year and a final €16 billion in 2014—to ensure the fund has enough capacity to start lending significant amounts soon after it launches. Because all the ESM capital won't be paid in upfront, an EU official said the governments could further accelerate the capital payments if needed to make more loans.

Until July 2013, when the EFSF will cease new lending, the EFSF and the ESM could in theory be making loans side-by-side, but ministers said the preferred option would be to make loans from the ESM.

The EFSF will thus for a year serve as an emergency backstop. That is because the ESM's status as an international financial institution, with its own capital, means the loans it makes lead to relatively small increases in the debt levels of euro-zone nations backing the fund. Each euro lent by the EFSF, by contrast, leads to a euro increase in the collective debt of the euro-zone governments guaranteeing the fund.

The commission had pushed an option that would have folded the EFSF's unused lending guarantees into the ESM, raising the bailout capacity to €940 billion and increasing the amount of lending available for future bailouts to €740 billion. German officials publicly opposed that option.

Source: WSJ Cartoons added by ET

Thursday, March 29, 2012

`சனல் 4க்கு மறுப்பு`- தமிழ்க் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் காட்டிக்கொடுப்பு.


`சனல் 4க்கு மறுப்பு `: பயங்கரவாதத்தின் நிழல்கள்!

பிரித்தானியாவின் சனல் 4 தொலைக்காட்சியில் காண்பிக்கப்பட்ட “இலங்கையின் கொலைக்களங்கள்“ என்னும் வீடியோவிற்கு பதிலளிக்கும்முகமாக இலங்கை பாதுகாப்பு அமைச்சினால் “பயங்கரவாதத்தின் நிழல்கள்“ என்னும் வீடியோ வெளியிடப்பட்டுள்ளது. அவ்வீடியோவின் முழு வடிவத்தின் -பகுதி 1 இங்கு தரப்பட்டிருக்கிறது.




பிரித்தானியாவின் சனல் 4 தொலைக்காட்சியில் காண்பிக்கப்பட்ட “இலங்கையின் கொலைக்களங்கள்“ என்னும் வீடியோவிற்கு பதிலளிக்கும்முகமாக இலங்கை பாதுகாப்பு அமைச்சினால் “பயங்கரவாதத்தின் நிழல்கள்“ என்னும் வீடியோ வெளியிடப்பட்டுள்ளது. அவ்வீடியோவின் முழு வடிவத்தின் -பகுதி 2 இங்கு தரப்பட்டிருக்கிறது.


Wednesday, March 28, 2012

சமரன் சர்வதேச போல்சுவிசத்தின் தமிழகப் போர்வாள்

நாட்டின் மீது ஆதிக்கம் செலுத்தும் முதலாளித்துவ ஊழலை எதிர்த்து மக்கள் இயக்கத்தைக் கட்டியமைப்போம்!
http://samaran1917.blogspot.co.uk/2012/01/blog-post.html

சில்லரை வணிகத்தில் அந்நிய முதலீட்டை முறியடிப்போம்!
http://samaran1917.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/24.html

முல்லைப் பெரியாற்றில் தமிழகத்தின் உரிமையைப் பாதுகாப்போம்!
http://samaran1917.blogspot.co.uk/2012/03/blog-post_08.html
படியுங்கள்!                    பரப்புங்கள்!                  பங்களியுங்கள்!

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

NHS Reforms became law

"We will never re-elect you if you wreck our NHS"


திருப்பி அழைக்கும் உரிமையுள்ள ஜனநாயகத்துக்காகப் போராடுவோம்!
அதிகாரிகளைத், தெரிவுசெய்யும் ஜனநாயகத்துக்காகப் போராடுவோம்!!

The Government's controversial reforms to the NHS
became law today after a tortuous 14-month passage through Parliament, when the Queen granted Royal Assent to the Health and Social Care Bill.


Deputy Speaker Lindsay Hoyle's announcement in the House of Commons that assent had been given was greeted by cries of "shame" from opposition Labour MPs.

The proposals were first tabled in Parliament in January 2011, but were subjected to an unprecedented "pause" last year as Health Secretary Andrew Lansley struggled to secure the support of healthcare workers, and were amended more than 1,000 times during a lengthy passage through the House of Lords.

The new rules mean the Government can create GP commissioning groups to buy health care for patients and scrap Primary Care Trusts (PCTs).

Labour has bitterly opposed the passage of the new law, insisting it threatens the foundation of the NHS and paves the way for private services to get too involved.

A draft risk register leaked today showed that ministers were warned 18 months ago of the risk that the reforms could lead to a loss of financial control, reduced productivity and emergencies being less well managed.

The Department of Health, which refused to comment on today's leak, has resisted a ruling from the Information Commissioner that it should release the final version of the risk register in response to a freedom of information request from Labour.

Shadow health secretary Andy Burnham said today's document showed that ministers were warned before they launched the Bill that it was "likely to cause major damage to the NHS".

The document was produced on September 28 2010, and it is not known what changes were made before the completion of the transition risk register on November 10. The Bill has changed fundamentally since that date.

Identifying 43 separate areas of potential risk, the draft register rates each on a scale of one to five, where a rating of one means little likelihood and very low impact and five means almost certain to occur and very high impact.

The likelihood and impact figures are multiplied together to give an overall risk rating, with a maximum score of 25.

Among 13 areas given a risk rating of 16 - with likelihood and impact each assessed at four out of five - were:

:: Parliamentary amendments creating "unforeseen consequences for the system";
:: Costs being driven up by GP consortia using private sector organisations and staff;
:: Implementation beginning before adequate planning has been done;
:: Loss of financial control;
:: "Unhelpful conflict" between the NHS commissioning board and regulator Monitor;
:: GP consortia going bust or having to cut services for financial reasons;
:: GP leaders being drawn into managerial processes which end up driving clinical behaviour.

Other dangers, considered to have a lower rating of 12, included the risk that "NHS role in emergency preparedness/responsiveness is more difficult to manage through a more devolved organisation, and so emergencies are less well managed/mitigated".

Staff concerns and union action over the reforms could lead to "deterioration in relations, lower productivity in the Department of Health/NHS and delays in programme", the document said.
And there was a warning that strategic health authorities and primary care trusts might lose "good people" who then have to be re-employed to run the new system.

Mr Burnham told the Guardian: "Now we know why David Cameron refused to publish the risk register before the Bill was through Parliament - it's because civil servants were telling him his reorganisation was likely to cause major damage to the NHS.

"David Cameron will never be forgiven for knowingly taking these risks with the country's best-loved institution."

A Department of Health spokesman said: "We do not comment on leaks. We have always been open about risk and have published all relevant information in the impact assessments alongside the Bill.
"As the latest performance figures show, we are dealing with those risks, performance is improving - waiting times are down and mixed-sex wards are at an all-time low - and we are on course to make the efficiency savings that the NHS needs to safeguard it for the future."
Source: Independent

Former IMF chief DSK indicted

ஒருவன் பெண் தின்னி, மற்றவன் பிணம் தின்னி!


Carlton: Former IMF chief DSK indicted

Story Heard yesterday in Lille, former IMF chief is charged with "procuring an organized gang."
 By VIOLET LAZARD

His appointment with the judges, originally scheduled for Wednesday, was advanced forty-eight hours. Perhaps to avoid the pack of journalists, one that was present during the two days
of police custody of Dominique Strauss-Kahn in a police barracks in Lille (North) on 21 and 22 February. Or perhaps for reasons of schedule.

Former IMF chief has been heard yesterday, since the beginning of the afternoon, by the judges handling the case of pandering to the Carlton Lille, until mid-evening, where he was indicted
for "procuring an organized gang," announced last night his lawyers. "He said with the strongest being guilty of any of these facts and never had any awareness that the women interviewed could be prostitutes, " said M e Richard Malka, whose client came out shortly after 22 hours of the courthouse
of Lille.

Rates. At the heart of the vast record of Carlton, which combines patterns of luxury hotels, business leaders, police, lawyers and the now famous pimp Dodo Brine, judges seek to determine the exact role of DSK. And, especially, if the former IMF chief knew that the participants in the libertine parties,
notably in Paris and Washington, were paid. Heard by the investigators, some of them argued that it could not ignore it. Others, who claim themselves as libertines rather than as prostitutes, said instead that guests were never aware of the financial transactions that were played in the background. And
the organizers of these evenings DSK had left in ignorance, just trying to go one day to attract the favor of the then favorite in the presidential election. But according to a source familiar with the matter, the former head of the IMF would be informed, at a party, on rates of one of the young
women present to recommend to a friend. An SMS would attest to this recommendation.

During his detention, Strauss-Kahn has denied these accusations en bloc. He explained that some of these young women it was presented by Commissioner Jean-Christophe Lagarde, former head
of the departmental security of the North, he could not have known of any compensation.

Judges also seek to determine whether DSK knew that his friends Lille companies (notably Fabrice Paszkowski, head of a medical device company in Lens, and David Roquet, former head of a
subsidiary of Eiffage) funded thin parts, hotels, meals and tickets and train tickets to Paris and Washington. And if he is complicit in abuse of corporate assets. The two businessmen,
who are among eight people indicted, have continued during their auditions - that release could see - repeating that DSK did not know where the money came. They also claimed that he
received no consideration in exchange for the organization of these escapades.

During his custody, Dominique Strauss-Kahn had also been questioned by the Inspector General of Police (IGPN, police policies) about his relationship with Commissioner Lagarde, indicted in the case, including pimping . "It appears that DSK had asked Lagarde to check with the DCRI [Central Directorate of Internal Intelligence, ed] the existence of a unit set up by Squarcini [the head of the DCRI] to monitor, we had a judicial source said. DSK is believed monitored, wiretapped illegally,
and Lagarde counted on to let him know what was going on behind him while he was in Washington. " This has probably been discussed again yesterday by magistrates.

Immunity. Stripped of its being convened in Lille judges, DSK, however, another important matter that awaits tomorrow. He was summoned to New York for a first hearing in a civil case under
Nafissatou Diallo. It is not forced to move to this new appointment with the U.S. justice, seven months after the abandonment of criminal charges against him. His American lawyers will try to convince the court in the Bronx, before whom the maid at the Sofitel complained that this is inadmissible Civil Procedure, benefiting their client at the time of the facts of diplomatic immunity total.

"சயனைட்" நாவல் - ஒரு பார்வை

  "சயனைட்" நாவல் - ஒரு பார்வை "தங்கமாலை கழுத்துக்களே கொஞ்சம் நில்லுங்கள்! நஞ்சுமாலை சுமந்தவரை நினைவில் கொள்ளுங்கள், எம் இனத்த...