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Monday, July 22, 2013

EU put Hezbollah military wing on terrorism blacklist

அமெரிக்காவின் சிரிய ஆக்கிரமிப்பு, ஆட்சிக்கவிழ்ப்பு, உலக மறுபங்கீட்டு யுத்தத்தை எதிர்த்து சிரியா லெபனான் எல்லைப்புறத்தில் ஆயுதம் ஏந்திப்போராடும் ஹெஸ்பொலா அமைப்பின் இராணுவப் பிரிவை ஐரோப்பிய யூனியன் `பயங்கரவாத` இயக்கமாக அறிவித்துள்ளது.அதேவேளையில் அசாத் ஆட்சிக்கவிழ்ப்பு யுத்தத்தின் அயோக்கிய விதேசிய, சிரிய மக்கள் மீது விசவாயுத் தாக்குதல் நடத்தும் உள்ளூர் பயங்கரவாதிகளுக்கு ஆயுதம் அளித்து அவர்களைக் `கிளர்ச்சியாளர்கள்` எனப் பிரகடனம் செய்துள்ளது.
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 Reuters | 22 July, 2013 15:26

Lebanon's Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah (2nd R), escorted by his bodyguards, greets his supporters at an anti-U.S. protest in Beirut's southern suburbs, in this September 17, 2012 file photo. European Union governments agreed on July 22, 2013 to put the armed wing of Hezbollah on the EU terrorism blacklist in a reversal of past policy fuelled by concerns over the Lebanese militant movement's activities in Europe.
Image by: SHARIF HARIM / REUTERS
European Union governments agreed on Monday to put the armed wing of Hezbollah on the EU terrorism blacklist in a reversal of past policy fuelled by concerns over the Lebanese militant movement's activities in Europe.

Britain and the Netherlands have pressed EU peers since May to put the Shi'ite Muslim group's military wing on the bloc's terrorism list, citing evidence it was behind a bus bombing in Bulgaria last year which killed five Israelis and their driver.

Until now, the EU had resisted pressure from Washington and Israel to blacklist Hezbollah, arguing such a move could fuel instability in Lebanon, where the group is part of the government, and add to tensions in the Middle East.

But evidence from Bulgaria about the attack and concerns over Hezbollah's growing involvement in the war in Syria persuaded opponents to back the move, which triggers the freezing of any assets the group's armed wing may hold in the 28-nation EU.

"It is good that the EU has decided to call Hezbollah what it is: a terrorist organisation," Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans said on the sidelines of a meeting of EU foreign ministers who decided on the blacklisting.

"We took this important step today, by dealing with the military wing of Hezbollah, freezing its assets, hindering its fundraising and thereby limiting its capacity to act."

யார் இந்த நீதி அரசன், விக்னேஸ்வரன்?

 
அவர் வாயால் கேள் ஈழத்தமிழினமே!
 
 

காஸ்மீரில் இந்தியப் பயங்கரம்


Saturday, July 20, 2013

Return to negotiations on the basis of the views and auspices of US Secretary of State John Kerry is committing “political suicide,” - PFLP

PFLP: Return to negotiations is political suicide, endangers Palestinian cause

Jul 202013

mizherr

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) said that any return to negotiations on the basis of the views and auspices of US Secretary of State John Kerry is committing “political suicide,” providing a cover for the government of occupation, ultra-extremism and settlements, in committing the most heinous crimes against the Palestinian people and their land.

The Front urged the Palestinian leadership to join all international organizations, including the International Criminal Court, without subjecting Palestinian rights, guaranteed by international law, to any bargains and futile bets on the US that have proved to be failures time and again.
The Front warned that the time to put the Palestinian house in order has come, saying that the Palestinian national movement is the basis for cohesion, unity, and solidarity against the occupation and forces hostile to our people and our nation, and the source of strength to protect our people, their rights and national steadfastness, and build global solidarity with the support of the free people of the world.

Comrade Jamil Mizher, member of the Central Committee of the PFLP, said in an interview that the resumption of direct negotiations “causes severe harm to the Palestinian cause. The PFLP completely rejects the resumption of the absurd negotiations, which do not achieve the minimum national demands of the Palestinian People,” said Mizher, adding that “20 years of absurd negotiations achieved a big zero, and only helped the Occupation to execute its plans of expansion.”
Mizher said that the agreement of Palestinian leadership to resume negotiations under Zionist conditions and American auspices is a great sin and a deep threat to the Palestinian national project, while encouraging occupation terrorism, land grabs and confiscation, and crimes against the Palestinian people.

Mizher said that the Palestinian people are struggling for their full rights, including self-determination, the right of return and independence and are not fighting for “economic improvements here or there, financial bribery offered by the US administration, or the establishment of an airport.”
He said that the president should give priority and importance to restoring national unity and building a national strategy based on adherence to fundamental Palestinian principles, instead of going to these negotiations, “he should be demanding that the International Criminal Court prosecute the occupation for their crimes against the Palestinian people, our brave prisoners, Palestinian land and holy sites.”
Mizher said that any bet on the US administration is a losing bet and that Kerry provided nothing from the Zionist occupation but only comes to pressure Palestinian leadership to make concessions undermining the rights of the Palestinian people, promoting discussions of “territory exchange,” the return of only a handful of refugees, and Palestinian refugees’ mass resettlement in other countries.
Comrade Dr. Rabah Muhanna, member of the Political Bureau of the PFLP, said that the Palestine Liberation Organization Central Council should hold Abu Mazen and the Executive Committee of the PLO accountable for this dangerous decision to return to negotiations. Muhanna said that the masses of the Palestinian people in the West Bank, Gaza, occupied Palestine ’48, and exile and diaspora are overwhelmingly against these harmful and destructive negotiations and must exercise real pressure on the Palestinian leadership equivalent to that exercised by the US and some Arab regimes.
Muhanna said that a return to negotiations means abandoning Palestinian national rights, and that these negotiations always begin from lower and lower points and only undermine Palestinian interests.

Friday, July 19, 2013

18-20 பில்லியன் கடனில் மூழ்கி திவாலாகிய அமெரிக்காவின் நான்காவது பெரிய தலை நகரம்.

அந்திமக் கால ஏகாதிபத்தியத்துக்கு மற்றொரு சான்று!
DETROIT
 
DETROIT — Detroit, the cradle of America’s automobile industry and once the nation’s fourth-most-populous city, filed for bankruptcy on Thursday, the largest American city ever to take such a course.
 
The decision, confirmed by officials after it trickled out in late afternoon news reports, also amounts to the largest municipal bankruptcy filing in American history in terms of debt.
 
“This is a difficult step, but the only viable option to address a problem that has been six decades in the making,” said Gov. Rick Snyder, who authorized the move after a recommendation from the emergency financial manager he had appointed to resolve Detroit’s dire financial situation.
 
Not everyone agrees how much Detroit owes, but Kevyn D. Orr, the emergency manager, has said the debt is likely to be $18 billion and perhaps as much as $20 billion.
 
For Detroit, the filing came as a painful reminder of a city’s rise and fall.
 
“It’s sad, but you could see the writing on the wall,” said Terence Tyson, a city worker who learned of the bankruptcy as he left his job at Detroit’s municipal building on Thursday evening. Like many there, he seemed to react with muted resignation and uncertainty about what lies ahead, but not surprise. “This has been coming for ages.”
 
Detroit expanded at a stunning rate in the first half of the 20th century with the arrival of the automobile industry, and then shrank away in recent decades at a similarly remarkable pace. A city of 1.8 million in 1950, it is now home to 700,000 people, as well as to tens of thousands of abandoned buildings, vacant lots and unlit streets.
 
From here, there is no road map for Detroit’s recovery, not least of all because municipal bankruptcies are rare. State officials said ordinary city business would carry on as before, even as city leaders take their case to a judge, first to prove that the city is so financially troubled as to be eligible for bankruptcy, and later to argue that Detroit’s creditors and representatives of city workers and municipal retirees ought to settle for less than they once expected.
 
Some bankruptcy experts and city leaders bemoaned the likely fallout from the filing, including the stigma. They anticipate further benefit cuts for city workers and retirees, more reductions in services for residents, and a detrimental effect on borrowing.
 
“For a struggling family I can see bankruptcy, but for a big city like this, can it really work?” said Diane Robinson, an office assistant who has worked for the city for 20 years. “What will happen to city retirees on fixed incomes?”
 
But others, including some Detroit business leaders who have seen a rise in private investment downtown despite the city’s larger struggles, said bankruptcy seemed the only choice left — and one that might finally lead to a desperately needed overhaul of city services and to a plan to pay off some reduced version of the overwhelming debts. In short, a new start.
 
“The worst thing we can do is ignore a problem,” said Sandy K. Baruah, president of the Detroit Regional Chamber. “We’re finally executing a fix.”
 
The decision to go to court signaled a breakdown after weeks of tense negotiations, in which Mr. Orr had been trying to persuade creditors to accept pennies on the dollar and unions to accept cuts in benefits.
 
All along, the state’s involvement — including Mr. Snyder’s decision to send in an emergency manager — has carried racial implications, setting off a wave of concerns for some in Detroit that the mostly white Republican-led state government was trying to seize control of Detroit, a Democratic city where more than 80 percent of residents are black.
 
The nature of Detroit’s situation ensures that it will be watched intensely by the municipal bond market, by public sector unions, and by leaders of other financially challenged cities around the country. Just over 60 cities, towns, villages and counties have filed under Chapter 9, the court proceeding used by municipalities, since the mid-1950s.
 
Leaders in Washington and in Lansing, the state capital, issued statements of concern late Thursday. A White House spokeswoman said President Obama and his senior team were closely monitoring the situation.
 
“While leaders on the ground in Michigan and the city’s creditors understand that they must find a solution to Detroit’s serious financial challenge, we remain committed to continuing our strong partnership with Detroit as it works to recover and revitalize and maintain its status as one of America’s great cities,” Amy Brundage, the spokeswoman, said in a statement.
 
The debt in Detroit dwarfs that of Jefferson County, Ala., which had been the nation’s largest municipal bankruptcy, having filed in 2011 with about $4 billion in debt. The population of Detroit, the largest city in Michigan, is more than twice that of Stockton, Calif., which filed for bankruptcy in 2012 and had been the nation’s most populous city to do so.
 
Other major cities, including New York and Cleveland in the 1970s and Philadelphia two decades later, have teetered near the edge of financial ruin, but ultimately found solutions other than federal court. Detroit’s struggle, experts say, is particularly dire because it is not limited to a single event or one failed financial deal, like the troubled sewer system largely responsible for Jefferson County’s downfall.
 
Instead, numerous factors over many years have brought Detroit to this point, including a shrunken tax base but still a huge, 139-square-mile city to maintain; overwhelming health care and pension costs; repeated efforts to manage mounting debts with still more borrowing; annual deficits in the city’s operating budget since 2008; and city services crippled by aged computer systems, poor record-keeping and widespread dysfunction.
 
All of that makes bankruptcy — a process that could take months, if not years, and is itself expected to be costly — particularly complex.
 
“It’s not enough to say, let’s reduce debt,” said James E. Spiotto, an expert in municipal bankruptcy at the law firm of Chapman and Cutler in Chicago. “At the end of the day, you need a real recovery plan. Otherwise you’re just going to repeat the whole thing over again.”
 
The municipal bond market will be paying particular attention to Detroit because of what it may mean for investing in general obligation bonds. In recent weeks, as Detroit officials have proposed paying off small fractions of what the city owes, they have indicated they intend to treat investors holding general obligation bonds as having no higher priority for payment than, for instance, city workers — a notion that conflicts with the conventions of the market, where general obligation bonds have been seen as among the safest investments and all but certain to be paid in full.
 
Leaders of public sector unions and municipal retirees around the nation will be focused on whether Detroit is permitted to slash pension benefits, despite a provision in the State Constitution that union leaders say bars such cuts.
 
Officials in other financially troubled cities may feel encouraged to follow Detroit’s path, some experts say. A rush of municipal bankruptcies appears unlikely, though, and leaders of other cities will want to see how this case turns out, particularly when it comes to pension and retiree health care costs, said Karol K. Denniston, a bankruptcy lawyer with Schiff Hardin who is advising a taxpayer group that came together in Stockton after its bankruptcy.
 
“If you end up with precedent that allows the restructuring of retirement benefits in bankruptcy court, that will make it an attractive option for cities,” Ms. Denniston said. “Detroit is going to be a huge test kitchen.”
 
Around this city, there was widespread uncertainty about what bankruptcy might really mean, now and in the long term. Officials said city workers were being sent letters, notifying them that city business would proceed as usual, from bills to permits. A hot line was planned for residents and others with questions and worries.
 
For some Detroiters, recent memories of bankruptcies by Chrysler and General Motors — and the re-emergence of those companies — appeared to have calmed nerves. But experts say corporate bankruptcy procedures are significantly different from municipal bankruptcies.
 
In municipal bankruptcies, for instance, the ability of judges to intervene in how a city is run is sharply limited. And municipal bankruptcies are a form of debt adjustment, as opposed to liquidation or reorganization.
 
Here, residents are likely to see little immediate change from the way the city has been run since March, when Mr. Orr arrived to oversee major decisions. A bankruptcy lawyer, he is widely expected to continue to run Detroit during a legal process. Mayor Dave Bing and Detroit’s elected City Council are still paid to hold office and are permitted to make decisions about day-to-day operations, though Mr. Orr could remove those powers.
 
Mr. Orr has said that as part of any restructuring he wants to spend about $1.25 billion on improving city infrastructure and services. But a major concern for Detroit residents remains the possibility that services, already severely lacking, might be further diminished in bankruptcy.
 
About 40 percent of the city’s streetlights do not work, a report from Mr. Orr’s office showed. More than half of Detroit’s parks have closed since 2008.
 
Monica Davey reported from Detroit, and Mary Williams Walsh from New York.
 
Source : New york Times
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Monday, July 01, 2013

லண்டன்: அரசியல் கலந்துரையாடலும் சமரன் வெளியீட்டக நூல்களின் கண்காட்சியும்


லண்டன்: அரசியல் கலந்துரையாடலும் சமரன் வெளியீட்டக நூல்களின் கண்காட்சியும் 290613

லண்டன்: அரசியல் கலந்துரையாடலும் சமரன் வெளியீட்டக நூல்களின் கண்காட்சியும்

நேற்றுமுன் தினம் சனிக்கிழமை 29-06-13 அன்று ஹரோவில் தமிழீழ அரசியல் கலந்துரையாடலும், சமரன் வெளியீட்டக நூல்களின் கண்காட்சியும் 
இடம்பெற்றது. மாவீரர் உறவுகளின் பேராதரவுடன் புதிய ஈழ புத்தக நிலையம் (NEBH), இந்நிகழ்ச்சியை ஏற்பாடு செய்திருந்தது. அன்றாட வாழ்வின்
நெருக்குதல் கருதி, காலை 10 மணிமுதல் பகல் 1 மணிவரை, மாலை 6 மணிமுதல் இரவு 10 மணிவரை, இரவு 11மணிமுதல் விடிகாலை 1.00
மணிவரை  என மூன்று காலநிரலில் இந்நிகழ்வு அமைந்தது.குறிப்பிடத்தக்க மக்கள்  இத் தொடர் சுற்று அறை அரங்கத்தில் கலந்து கொண்டனர்.
 
தமிழரின் தாகம் தமிழீழத் தாயகம்!
தமிழரின் தேவை தமிழீழ மக்கள் ஜனநாயகக் குடியரசு!
உலகத் தொழிலாளர்களே ஒடுக்கப்பட்ட தேசங்களே ஒன்று சேருங்கள்!
 
தகவல்:புதிய ஈழ புத்தக நிலையம் (NEBH)

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

அறிமுகம்: புதிய ஈழ புத்தக நிலையம்


 
ENB இணைய குடும்பத்தில் மற்றொரு குழந்தையாக `புதிய ஈழ புத்தக நிலையம்` NEBH, இணைந்து கொண்டுள்ளது என்பதை தாழ்மையுடன் அறியத் தருகின்றோம்.

உலக சோசலிச, மற்றும் புதிய- தேசிய ஜனநாயகப் புரட்சிகர சர்வ தேசிய இயக்கத்தின் அறிவார்ந்த வெளியீடுகளை உழைக்கும் மக்களுக்கு எடுத்துச் செல்லும் பணியை NEBH தனது தலையாய பணியாகக் கொண்டுள்ளது.

NEBH புரட்சிகர அரசியல் இலக்கிய வெளியீடுகளின் (இலாப நோக்கற்ற)   விற்பனை நிறுவனமும், அதே வேளை .புரட்சிகர இலக்கிய வெளியீடுகளின், சர்வதேச அரசியல் விவகார வெளியீடுகளின் அறிமுகத் தளமுமாகும்.

சமூக மாறுதலை வேண்டிநிற்கும் சமுதாய சக்திகளுக்கு இவ்விணையம் காணிக்கை!
 
புதிய ஈழப்புரட்சியாளர்கள்

"சயனைட்" நாவல் - ஒரு பார்வை

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