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Thursday, December 22, 2016

Statement of the PFLP on the 49th anniversary of its founding



Statement of the PFLP on the 49th anniversary of its founding
Dec 11 2016

Today, we mark the 49th anniversary of the founding of the Popular Front for the Liberation, founded on December 11, 1967 out of the impact of the defeat of June 5. The founding of the Front was an injection of a new hope out of the rubble of defeat, on an intellectual, political, and struggling level, to carry forward and raise the banner of the revolution, struggle, and national liberation movement against the Zionist project. On this path, tens of thousands of martyrs, prisoners, wounded, and strugglers, among the martyrs, the prisoners, and the wounded and strugglers of the Palestinian people, the Arab nation, and the international movements, have come forward. We salute them today with the highest regard and pride in them and their legendary sacrifices and heroism that have formed a historic and distinguished legacy and history of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and the Palestinian national movement overall.

In light of the ongoing international, regional and Arab situation and the negative repercussions, and amid ongoing weakness and division in the Palestinian internal situation, the Palestinian cause is at risk of liquidation, perhaps more now than ever before. Therefore, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine emphasizes and calls for the following:

First, the need for a serious, comprehensive national dialogue to review the entire Palestinian experience and develop a unified strategy for our national liberation movement. This includes the rebuilding of representative institutions and popular unions, especially the Palestine Liberation Organization, and the creation of the environment and infrastructure of internal democracy that is necessary to build and promote the values of collective national struggle. It is critical to support the steadfastness of the people with viable material support and concrete action, to affirm their roots in their land and attachment to national identity, and unity inside and outside Palestine, in the homeland and in exile and diaspora.

Second, the critical urgency to completely abandon the Oslo agreement and its unfair obligations and catastrophic consequences for Palestinian rights, struggles, national goals, and the overall liberation project. This requires an end to reliance on the path of negotiations and rejection of the pressure to return to that path. Instead, we must affirm the need for full implementation of the rights of the Palestinian people recognized by the United Nations. We reject any political initiatives aimed at imposing an alternative international reference to detract from the rights of the Palestinian people.
Third, the need to end Palestinian internal division and restore national unity without delay or procrastination, and without continuing to rely on international or regional powers whose interests are not in favor of our cause, our people, or our rights.

Fourth, the need to hold a unified Palestinian National Council under preparation by the preliminary leadership commission agreed upon in Cairo, and to reject any monopolistic call to convene the PNC in Ramallah. That path is only the further development of the intellectual, organizational and political methodology that has caused so much damage to the Palestinian movement and led it to the current dangerous impasse.

Fifth, the need to use all forms and methods of struggle in the context of the existential battle with the Zionist enemy. No form of struggle is a replacement for another.

Sixth, the necessity to support all acts of struggle and the mass movements which have become known as the Jerusalem intifada, and for all forces to provide an organizational and political incubator for the development of the popular struggle.

Seventh, the development of a comprehensive national plan to support the prisoners and their struggles in official and popular efforts in order to seek their freedom and raise their struggle for liberation at an international level. The PFLP raises its highest salutes and appreciation to all of the heroic prisoners who fought the battle of empty stomachs, including our comrade, the leader Bilal Kayed, and the two imprisoned brothers currently on hunger strike, Anas Shadid and Ahmad Abu Fara.

Eighth, we call on the forces of Arab liberation to recapture the vision of their project and role, based on the seriousness of the current situation in the Arab region, to be free of internal conflicts, proxy wars, and sectarian divisions. This comes amid the accelerating normalization with the enemy by some Arab regimes as other Arab states disintegrate. The Palestinian struggle is at the heart of the Arab cause.

Ninth, we stand with our Arab peoples in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Egypt, and throughout the Arab world, to confront sectarianism and sectarian divisions and reactionary violence under the guise of religion, and we stand with the resistance to such forces.

Tenth, we urge the expansion of the international struggle alongside all forces for peace, justice, and liberation in the world, and all who stand with the struggle of the Arab and Palestinian peoples for freedom and liberation. In particular, we salute all of those involved in the campaigns for the boycott of the Zionist entity.



As it enters its fiftieth year, the PFLP will continue to struggle based on a clear vision and the premises upon which it was founded, on the Palestinian, Arab and international levels. We are marching toward victory on the path of revolution, in our national liberation struggle for justice and freedom.

Glory to the martyrs of the Palestinian people and the Front, and salutes to the founder George Habash and the leader Abu Ali Mustafa!

Freedom for the brave prisoners, for our imprisoned General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat and all of the leaders of the prisoners’ movement!

Victory for the Palestinian People!

Political Bureau, Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
 December 11, 2016

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Was it possible to take the Russian ambassador’s killer alive?

 
Why wasn’t killer captured?
 
 


Was it possible to take the Russian ambassador’s killer alive?
December 21, 2016 Vladimir Vaschenko, Gazeta.ru 

It was possible not to kill the assassin of Russian Ambassador to Turkey Andrei Karlov, but take him alive, argue some Russian experts. This would have helped to shed light on the crime, including on who may have ordered the assassination. One Russian observer even believes that the killer was liquidated on purpose in order to complicate the investigation.

The assassination of Russian Ambassador to Turkey Andrei Karlov has been the top story for the Turkish press. Yet there is very little information on what the Turkish law-enforcement agents did to detain the killer.

It is known that at about 7:30 p.m. local time Karlov arrived at the Center of Modern Art in Ankara to participate in the opening of a photo exhibition. His speech had lasted for less than a minute when the killer, who was standing behind him, took a gun out of his pocket and crying "Allahu Akbar" shot Karlov in the back several times. In total the assassin fired 11 shots into the diplomat.

Afterwards, he cried out slogans about Aleppo and Syria for several minutes and shot at the ceiling and towards the scattered crowd.

Twenty-five minutes after the assassination, the killer was shot dead by members of Turkey's special units. The assassin was later named as 22-year-old Mevlut Mert Altintash, who for the last two years had served in a division of the local Interior Ministry special forces responsible for crowd control.
It was possible to take him alive

According to Boris Dolgov, senior scientific collaborator at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Middle East Institute, Karlov's assassination could have been either the act of a lone killer or a well-planned operation.

"I think it's strange that Altintas was killed. There was the possibility of taking him alive, then questioning him and getting him to tell the authorities who he was linked to," said Dolgov.

RA ASSASSIN
VIDEO

Why wasn’t killer captured?

Andrei Popov, a veteran of the Federal Security Service’s Alpha special unit and a reserve lieutenant colonel, analyzed the operation carried out on Altintas.

"It is always difficult to discuss an operation when you are not present on the site and far from the concrete circumstances surrounding it,” said Popov.

“However, it is obvious that by the time the Turkish special forces got involved, the ambassador's killer had already disclosed himself as the culprit. On the video that I saw it is also clear that the criminal did not prevent the people from leaving the building and did not try to take hostages. It was possible to take him alive."

Popov believes that this opportunity was not taken advantage of due to a disagreement among the Turkish law enforcement officers or to their unprofessionalism.

"In such cases the mechanism of detainment is already prepared: The object is shot in the right shoulder, which deprives him of the possibility to put up active resistance. Subsequently, he is detained,” he explained.

Popov added that he “did not rule out” that Altintas could have had accomplices in Turkey's special forces and security services who had “decided to eliminate him so that he wouldn't tell the investigators all the circumstances of the assassination.”

Meanwhile, on Dec. 20, 18 employees from Russia's Investigative Committee and Foreign Ministry arrived in Ankara. They will be investigating Karlov's assassination together with the Turkish law enforcement agents. According to the local press, the Russian ambassador's body was delivered to the Expert Forensic Institute in Ankara for examination and on Dec. 20 was flown to Moscow.

First published in Russian by Gazeta.ru

Russian Ambassador assassination video

RA Assasination

IMF Chief Found Guilty of Corruption, Won't Punished


IMF Chief Christine Lagarde
IMF Chief Christine Lagarde Found Guilty of Corruption, Won’t Be Punished

By Jeremiah Jones
Global Research, December 20, 2016
Counter Current News 19 December 2016

Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), on Monday was found guilty of “negligence” for approving a massive government payout to business tycoon Bernard Tapie during her tenure as French finance minister.

“This should help calm all that they’re-only-in-it-for-themselves, anti-establishment feeling out there,” quipped Globe and Mail senior international correspondent Mark MacKinnon in response to the latest charge of government corruption.

Though Judge Martine Ract Madoux did not hand down a sentence for the managing director, the court said Largarde “should have done more” to prevent the €405m ($422m) payout, Bloomberg reports.

Tapie, a close associate and financial backer of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, was awarded the payout in 2008.

AFP explains:

“An arbitration panel ordered the payout to Tapie in connection with his sale of sportswear company Adidas. The panel upheld Tapie’s claim that the Crédit Lyonnais bank had defrauded him by intentionally undervaluing Adidas at the time of the sale and that the state — as the bank’s principal shareholder—should compensate him.

“It was Lagarde who, in her role as French finance minister, ordered the case to be heard by an arbitration panel instead of proceeding through the regular courts.

“Critics say that Lagarde ensured Tapie received preferential treatment by referring the matter to arbitration as a quid pro quo for his financial support for Sarkozy during his 2007 presidential bid.”
Lagarde, who is traveling to Washington, D.C., was not present at Monday’s hearing in Paris, though she will likely appeal the decision. Reuters notes that the ruling could potentially trigger “a new leadership crisis at the International Monetary Fund after Lagarde’s predecessor Dominique Strauss Khan resigned in 2011 over a sex assault scandal.”

What’s more, the trial and surprise conviction will likely “reviv[e] concerns in France about high-level corruption,”the New York Times notes, “shining a spotlight on intimate ties between politicians and business people, and on the large sums that are sometimes used to grease the country’s political wheels.”

As many noted, Lagarde’s conviction capped off a year of intense political upheaval and establishment backlash across the globe.

GR Editor’s Note: Dominque Strauss Khan was framed in 2011. Lagarde was appointed to the position of Managing Director of the IMF (replacing Strauss Khan) a few days prior to a New York Court ruling which completely exonerated Dominique Strauss Khan on the basis of lack of evidence.
While Strauss Khan was dismissed following the 2011 scandal (despite the ruling of the New York court case which abandoned all charges again him) the financial scam involving Christine Lagarde was known to the French government. This however did not prevent her appointment to the IMF.  Needless to say, she retains her position at the IMF despite having been involved in a financial scam.

The original source of this article is Counter Current News
Copyright © Jeremiah Jones, Counter Current News, 2016

 

China Seizes U.S. Navy Drone in In South China Sea


Photo credit: NOEL CELIS/AFP/Getty Images
China Seizes U.S. Navy Drone in In South China Sea
By Emily Tamkin, Paul McLeary
December 16, 2016 - 2:38 pm
emily.tamkin@emilyctamkin

On Friday, amid U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s tough talk on Beijing, a Chinese navy ship snapped up an unarmed U.S. underwater drone just 50 miles from Subic Bay, in the Philippines.
The move represents a brazen effort to further stake out China’s unilateral sway over the South China Sea, coming hard on the heels of new revelations that Beijing has sent more advanced weapons to its fake islands in the region. It also seems a deliberate riposte after the top U.S. admiral in the Pacific redoubled American commitment to free and open navigation in the crucial waterway.

A U.S. defense official said Friday that a Chinese naval vessel grabbed the drone when it was operating with the oceanographic survey ship USNS Bowditch not far from the Philippine capital. The drone was only about 500 yards away from the unarmed U.S. ship when it was seized. Despite immediate protests by U.S. forces, the Chinese slipped away.

“It is ours, and it is clearly marked as ours and we would like it back,” Pentagon spokesman Jeff Davis told reporters at the Pentagon on Friday. “And we would like this not to happen again.”
The Navy has over one hundred such gliders that can be deployed for up to a month at a time, transmitting oceanic data back to ships and ground stations. In a statement, Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook added that “China unlawfully seized” the ocean glider, which was “conducting routine operations in accordance with international law.”

The Bowditch was in contact with the Chinese Navy ship throughout the incident, but American requests to return the vessel was ignored, a defense official confirmed. “The [drone] is a sovereign immune vessel of the United States,” Cook added. “We call upon China to return our UUV immediately, and to comply with all of its obligations under international law.”

Seizing military goods belonging to another country in international waters is a particularly aggressive step, even for a country like Beijing, which rejects or systematically ignores huge chunks of international maritime law.

“This is borderline unbelievable. It is hard to imagine what possible rationale Beijing is going to come up with,” said Gregory Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. AMTI produced the new surveillance photos this week showing Chinese air-defense installations on disputed atolls. Poling said that given where the incident occurred, “there is no conceivable map” which could justify its behavior.

On Thursday, in Sydney, Australia, U.S. Pacific Commander Adm. Harry Harris said, “We will not allow a shared domain to be closed down unilaterally no matter how many bases are built on artificial features in the South China Sea.” That prompted a rejoinder from nationalist media in Beijing and Chinese government officials.

The drone incident also comes at a complicated time for U.S.-Philippine relations, especially regarding China. The election of anti-American Rodrigo Duterte as Philippine president this May has soured ties between Manila and Washington and postponed defense exercises. On Thursday, Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Perfecto Yasay said that the Philippines would no longer focus on the South China Sea in its relationship with China, essentially ceding terrain to Beijing just months after Manila won a landmark international arbitration case that pilloried China’s illegal behavior.

“The only way to move forward is to strengthen the other aspects of our relationship and also make sure that in the process, you are able to pursue confidence-building measures that will eventually allow you, in the future, to resolve your disputes peacefully,” he said, noting, “What will you do? Engage yourself in a war with China where there will be no winners? Nobody wants a war.”

The big hit to China’s reputation that everyone expected when it ignored the Hague ruling might come as a result of the drone snatching. Euan Graham, director of international studies at the Lowy Institute for International Policy, said on Twitter, “Stunt humiliates USN but hurts China’s reputation more. Does [Chinese Admiral] Wu Shengli want to command a rogue navy?”

It’s not the first time China has grabbed or threatened U.S. gear in the region. In the spring of 2001, a U.S. surveillance plane collided with a Chinese jet near Hainan; the plane and its crew were held for months. In 2009, the U.S. Navy said that Chinese vessels were harassing its surveillance ships. In 2011, Vietnam accused China of cutting survey ships’ cables. More recently, Chinese naval vessels and aircraft have in many instances practiced unsafe maneuvers, threatening on-sea or mid-air collisions.

China’ silence so far on the motives behind the drone episode make it even harder for experts to understand.

“If this was planned to send a message, you have to say something for the message to get out,” said Poling. “All of this is bizarre, even by Chinese standards.”

Source:FP

வட மாகாணசபை முடிவை எதிர்த்து பனங்கட்டிக் கொட்டு மீனவர் போராட்டம்

 
மன்னார் பனங்கட்டிக்கொட்டு மீனவர்கள் வீதியை மறித்து போராட்டம்
 
மன்னார் பனங்கட்டிக்கொட்டு மீனவர்கள் வீதியை மறித்து போராட்டம்
தென் கடல் பகுதியில் 'கட்டுவலைத் தொழிலை' மேற்கொண்டு வரும் மன்னார் பனங்கட்டிக்கொட்டு மற்றும் அயல் கிராம மீனவ ர்களின் கட்டு வலைகளை கடலில் இருந்து அகற்றுவதற்கான நடவடிக்கைகளை (இன்று) புதன்கிழமை மன்னார் கடற்தொழில் திணைக்களத்தின் உதவிப்பணிப்பாளர் மேற்கொண்ட நடவடிக்கைகளுக்கு எதிர்ப்புத்தெரிவித்து பனங்கட்டிக்கொட்டு கிராம மக்கள் இன்று புதன்கிழமை காலை 6.15 மணி முதல் வீதி மறியல் போராட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்டனர்.
 
 
மன்னார் பிரதான பால வீதியில் இன்று காலை 6.15 மணியளவில் ஒன்று கூடிய நூற்றுக்கணக்கான மக்கள் வீதியை மறித்து ஆர்ப்பாட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்டனர்.இதனால் காலை 6.15 மணிமுதல் மன்னாரில் இருந்து வெளிமாவட்டத்திற்கு செல்லும் போக்குவரத்துச் சேவைகள் பாதிக்கப்பட்டது.
 

அரச பேருந்துகளையும் இடைமறித்து தமது ஆர்ப்பாட்டத்தை முன்னெடுத்தனர்.



 
 
இதன் போது மன்னார் பொலிஸ் அத்தியட்சகர் மற்றும் மன்னார் பொலிஸ் நிலைய பொறுப்பதிகாரி ஆகியோர் சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு வருகை தந்து வீதிமறியல் போராட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்ட மக்களுடன் போச்சுவார்த்தை நடத்தினர்.எனினும் உரிய அதிகாரிகள் சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு வந்து தங்களுடன் போர்ச்சுவார்த்தை நடத்தி தென் கடல் பகுதியில் உள்ள 'கட்டுவலைகளை' அகற்ற மாட்டோம் என உறுதிமொழி வழங்க வேண்டும் என கோரிக்கை விடுத்ததோடு தொடர்ந்தும் வீதியை மறித்து ஆர்ப்பாட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்டனர். இத னால் நீண்ட நேரம் போக்குவரத்துச் சேவைகள் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.

 
 
இந்தநிலையில் மன்னார் கடற்தொழில் திணைக்கள அதிகாரிகள் சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு வந்து மீனவர்களுடன் கலந்துரையாடினர். இத ன்போது வடமாகாண சபை உறுப்பினர் வைத்திய கலாநிதி ஜீ.குணசீலன் சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு வருகை தந்து ஆர்ப்பாட்டத்தில் ஈடு பட்ட மக்களுடன் கலந்துரையாடினார்.
 

இதன் போது பனங்கட்டிக்கொட்டு கிராமத்தைச் சேர்ந்த பல நூற்றுக்கணக்கான மீனவர்கள் கட்டுவலைத்தொழிலையே மேற்கொ ண்டு வருகின்றனர்.ஆராம்ப காலத்தில் மன்னார் சௌத்பார் தென்கடல் பகுதியில் இரும்புக் குழாய் மூலம் இவ் வலைகள் பாயப்ப ட்டிருந்தது.

 
 
இதனால் அயல் கிராம மீனவர்களின் படகுகளுக்கு சேதம் விளைவிக்கின்றது என்ற கேள்விக்கு அமைவாக இரும்புக்குழாய்கள் மூலம் பாயப்பட்ட வலைகள் இரும்பு பைப் இன்றி மிதவை மூலம் பாயப்பட்டு எந்த விதமான பாதிப்புக்களும் இன்றி நாங்கள் கட ற்தொழிலில் ஈடுபட்டு வந்தோம்.
 

இந்த நிலையில் தென் கடல் பகுதியில் பாய்ச்சப்பட்டுள்ள கட்டு வலைகள் அனைத்தையும் அகற்றுமாறு கடந்த மாதம் 9 ஆம் திகதி மன்னார் கடற்தொழில் திணைக்கள உதவிப்பணிப்பாளர் கடிதம் அனுப்பியுள்ளார்.
 

இந்தநிலையில் இன்றைய தினம்(21) குறித்த தென் கடல் பகுதியில் உள்ள கட்டு வலைகளை அகற்ற மன்னார் கடற்தொழில் திணை க்கள உதவிப்பணிப்பாளர் நடவடிக்கைகளை மேற்கொண்ட நிலையிலே நாங்கள் நீதி கோரி வீதி மறியல் போராட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்ட தாக மக்கள் தெரிவித்தனர்.

 
 
இந்த நிலையில் வருகை தந்த பொலிஸ் அதிகாரிகள் கடற்தொழில் திணைக்கள அதிகாரிகளுடன் மேற்கொண்ட பேச்சுவார்த்தை யின் காரணமாக கடலில் உள்ள கட்டு வலைகள் அகற்றப்படாது என கடற்தொழில் திணைக்கள அதிகாரிகள் தெரிவித்தனர்.
 

இன்று(21) மாலை இவ்விடயம் தொடர்பில் கொழும்பில் இருந்து வருகை தரும் உயர் அதிகாரிகளுடன் பேச்சுவார்த்தை மேற்கொ ள்ளப்பட்டு இறுதி முடிவுகள் மேற்கொள்ளப்படும் என தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டது.
 

இந்த நிலையில் வீதிமறியல் கைவிடப்பட்டது.பின் குறித்த கிராம மக்கள் மன்னார் மாவட்டச் செயலகத்திற்கு சென்று கடற்தொ ழில் நீரியல் வளத்துறை அமைச்சர் மஹிந்த அமரவீர அவர்களுக்கு வழங்கப்பட வேண்டிய மகஜரை மாவட்ட அரசாங்க அதிபர் எம்.வை.எஸ்.தேசப்பிரியவிடம் கையளித்தனர்.
 

வீதி மறியல் போராட்டத்தின் காரணமாக காலை 6.30 மணி முதல் 7.40 மணிவரையில் போக்குவரத்துக்கள் தடைப்பட்டிருந்தமை குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.
 
நன்றி: செய்தி புகைப்படங்கள் உதயன்

Sunday, December 18, 2016

அறிவிப்பு: கழக வள்ளுவர் கோட்ட ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் இடம் தேதி மாற்றம்

கழக அறிவிப்பு
ஜெயா இறப்பு ,வர்தா புயல் காரணமாக சென்னை வள்ளுவர் கோட்டத்தில்  19-12-2016 இல் நடத்தத் திட்டமிட்டிருந்த செல்லாக்காசு மோடி ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் ,இட மாற்றம் செய்யப்பட்டு, தருமபுரி BSNL அலுவலகம் அருகில் 26 .12 .2016 திங்கள் மாலை 4.00 மணியளவில் நடைபெறவுள்ளது .
 

தலைமை
தோழர்.மாயகண்ணன் ம.ஜ.இக தருமபுரி மாவட்ட அமைப்பாளர்,
 
கண்டன உரை
தோழர் ஞானம் ம.ஜ.இ.க மாநில அமைப்பாளர்,
 
தோழர் மனோகரன் ம.ஜ.இ.க சிறப்பு பேச்சாளர்.
 
அனைவரும் வருக, கண்டனம் முழங்குக , நிதி வழங்குக .
 
 

நல்லாட்சியில் சாமான்ய மக்களுக்கு கண்ணி வெடி அகற்றும் `தொழில் வாய்ப்பு`.

 
கண்ணிவெடி
 
For the countless jobless, deadly mines are a lifeline
By Ravi Shankar in Jaffna

They earn about 25,000 rupees a month, but the women of Muhamalai, who are digging up many types of explosives including anti-personnel mines, anti-tank mines and unexploded ordnance, are doing priceless work in the largest minefield in Sri Lanka. Tamil terrorist fighters and Sri Lanka’s military laid thousands of mines in the area during the war years. After combat ended, Devlon Assistance for Social Harmony (DASH), a local NGO began employing many jobless women from the area to neutralise deadly weapons buried by combatants. The hidden killer continues to cause injuries including in children.

 Women field staffers involved in the demining process at Muhamalai

DASH, co-founded by Brigadier Ananda Chandrasiri, began operations in 2012 and now employs many women who go about their business of clearing the deadly arsenal scanning every inch of land beneath their feet – one mine at a time in the baking heat. From appearances alone, it is hard to figure out if they are fearful, although they wear protective gear such as vests, visors and boots.

But the reality is that for many, demining is the only job available in a country where millions, especially women, remain jobless. Many who are staring down on death every day in Muhamalai are single mothers from former conflict areas.For Kosala Devi, a mother of three, there is no choice: “Not that I am unaware of the perils of this job. Even my children do not want me to work in a demining site. But the truth is, there is no other job to do in this area.”

Among the NGO’s field staff, 22 percent are females. Demining gives them an opportunity to the earn between Rs 22,000 and Rs 25,000. Most agree that it is a big payday for them.Among the workers are a few former LTTE combatants who have completed the Government’s rehabilitation programme. Some had been conscripted as child soldiers by the LTTE but are now more than 18 years old.

Though in most of the demining sites machinery is used to identify mines, manual work is still needed regardless of the dangers. But Brig Chandrasiri, says workers are trained for a month before they go digging for mines. And yet accidents do happen. A woman field worker says she did suffer from an accident when she pulled the detonator of a mine.

Wearing body armour and a visor, she still crawls into minefields in the shrubs and muddy trenches. “I was lucky that I had only minor injuries and was taken to the hospital immediately. But after that incident I am more vigilant and also I am less afraid of the risk factor in demining,’’ Kosala said.

Land mines and other unexploded devices collected by the DASH at the Muhamalai demining site
Demining is a tedious, laborious undertaking and it takes years. “The mine clearance is slow. A hundred as mines can be laid in a day, but it takes a year to clear,’’ said Brig Chandrasiri. Much has been achieved over the years by many NGOs and the Government.

Military spokesperson, Brigadier Roshan Seneviratna, said: “We expect to make Sri Lanka free from the threat of mines by 2020, if the funding comes in properly.’’ That appears ambitious. Sri Lankan Mine Action Strategy reveals that 6.5 sq km are expected to be cleared every year. In Muhamalai, DASH has cleared only 30 percent of the total confirmed mined area, after six years of work.

According to DASH, more than 700 mines have been extracted from Muhamalai.  “Both parties involved in the war never followed any patterns or kept any maps to identify locations of mines,’’ Brig Chandrasiri said. The terrorist group and the army used Pakistan made P4 mines extensively. In addition to DASH, two other NGOs the HALO trust and SHARP are carrying out the mine clearance in northern Sri Lanka, along with the army’s mine clearance team. Presently, Japan is the main source of funding for these NGOs along with UN and other countries.

Foreign funding is essential. According to United Nations estimates, it takes only US$3 (Rs 445.50) to lay a mine and US$1,000 (Rs 148,500) to remove one.

 Another challenge faced is the lack of awareness about mined areas among the civilians. This year three civilians were killed in Muhamalai, when they had encroached onto the protected area unknowingly.
 

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Ram Ranil Interview

Ranil Wickremesinghe |  Interview 
‘We’re all patriots, we’re all nationalists’
N. Ram
December 15, 2016 01:07 IST  

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe on how an unusual political project has gone so far.

Ranil Wickremesinghe, 67, Prime Minister of Sri Lanka for a fourth term and leader of the United National Party (UNP), is the spearhead of a complex game-changing project where the stakes are extremely high. The project is to see through Parliament, and then through a referendum, a major constitutional change that will put an end to the system of an overbearing executive presidency and usher in a prime ministerial system  — and, crucially, put in place an enduring devolution of power solution to the Tamil question. Mr. Wickremesinghe leads a national government made possible by a highly unusual compact between the two main rival parties in the political system  — the UNP, the party with by far the largest numbers in Parliament, and a minority of Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) MPs who are with the Prime Minister’s political opponent-and-ally, President Maithripala Sirisena.

While the leaders of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) have taken a positive view of the constitutional change under way, the political forces of Sinhala ultra-nationalism are trying to
rally round the former President, Mahinda Rajapaksa.

In a recent interview given to The Hindu at Temple Trees in Colombo, Sri Lanka’s assured and confident-sounding Prime Minister answered questions relating to these key issues.

Prime Minister, the overall political situation in Sri Lanka seems to have stabilised after the big change in 2015, the election of Maithripala Sirisena as President followed by your victory in the parliamentary elections. How do you see this process, which has seen improvement as well as complications?

With the parliamentary elections in August 2015, we created the National Government. And we gave it a period for it to stabilise. I think that has taken place now. We also prepared a new policy framework. We had incurred a heavy national debt, there was adverse publicity for Sri Lanka, and human rights was a big issue — all those have been resolved.

I would say we have sort of created the stability and cleared the way. Now, next year is when we have to deliver on our promises, which will also help us to consolidate this arrangement. We have started the journey, it has been slow going. It would be, if the two major parties have to get together. It’s a tremendous task. Still haven’t got the two major parties to get together in India or anywhere else. But it has worked out well here. Now it is a question of delivery and consolidation. We are moving on different fronts. We are looking at reconciliation, looking at the crisis in the North — both the human problems and the economic problems, the development. The President is now focussing on the rural poor. We are discussing a new Constitution. I would say that the next two years are important for us to consolidate the gains we have made.

How is the economy doing? What has happened, is it a gain?

It is a gain. We have undertaken a macroeconomic stabilisation programme. And we are moving our revenue collection, which was about 10-11 per cent of GDP. Hopefully we will be at 15 per cent when our term is over and then we can move towards a higher level. Ours is also an exercise in how do you bring the black money in; and we are trying to phase out the long tax holidays that have been granted. We want to bring the budget deficit down to about 4 per cent by 2020 — and that’s the process. It’s now more a question of revenue collection and better management of the public funds.
We have strengthened Parliament — by allowing it to have the [sectoral] oversight committees; we have established the Public Finance Committee; we will bring legislation for the Parliamentary Budget Office; and the present J.R Jayewardene Centre may be used for parliamentary research, very much like the unit you have in New Delhi or the institute that is available in Islamabad.to bring the budget deficit down to about 4 per cent by 2020 — and that’s the process. It’s now more a question of revenue collection and better management of the public funds.

We have strengthened Parliament — by allowing it to have the [sectoral] oversight committees; we have established the Public Finance Committee; we will bring legislation for the Parliamentary Budget Office; and the present J.R Jayewardene Centre may be used for parliamentary research, very much like the unit you have in New Delhi or the institute that is available in Islamabad.
  
What are the challenges on the economic front?
 
Growth. How do you go up to 7 per cent growth? Getting the investments in. Creating more employment. Increasing incomes and then reviving the rural economy. I’m confident we can do it the way we started off.

And the economic situation in the North?

The North is going to take a longer time. The war has destroyed the economy. So it will be a longer period but we have given special concessions for investment in the North —double the normal concessions we have given the rest of the country, incentives.

Can the arrangement you are involved in be called cohabitation —  where one of the two main parties in the political system is divided and one of its groups has made common cause
with the party that emerged victorious, or relatively victorious, in the parliamentary elections? What would you say about the chemistry between that section of the SLFP which is with
the President, and your party?

It’s more than just the two main parties working together in government. We are also having an understanding with the Opposition — the TNA and the JVP [Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna] who supported President Maithripala Sirisena as the common candidate [in the presidential elections of January 2015]. They went separately for the parliamentary elections, the UNP had no separate deal with them. But they also were convinced. Even within the group of the UPFA [United People’s Freedom Alliance] that sits on the other side, I don’t think they want to go over the precipice. This whole new question of [SLFP dissidents] starting a separate party has been resisted by some of the members of the UPFA who are sitting in opposition. But it’s a new era. It’s not only the UNP and SLFP working together; we also work with the other parties.

We’ve made the whole Parliament into a government, because we have the oversight committees. And then you have a Cabinet. The exact executive policies will be looked at by the Cabinet but the oversight committees will look at implementation. It’s really becoming a two-tier government. The first oversight committees were in the U.S., with the American presidential system. Secondly, in Europe they’ve had the European Commission and the European Parliament. Now what we are experimenting with, the pilot project is having the oversight committees with a cabinet government, because the Prime Minister and the members of the Cabinet are also Members of Parliament. But the Ministers cannot be in the oversight committees; it’s generally backbenchers who chair them, both from the Government and the Opposition — it’s divided in a ratio amongst parties.

So the mechanisms for different parties getting together in a broad-based way in the political system are there and working quite well.

Yes, it’s working. Can be improved, but it’s working.

What is your perception of the rift within the SLFP — between the pro-Rajapaksa and pro-Sirisena groups? Does it affect the unity of the government you lead? Does the possibility of
Mahinda Rajapaksa’s comeback concern you?
 
We have factored in that there is a group around Mahinda Rajapaksa who will sit in the opposition. But within our framework of all groups in Parliament working in the oversight committees, there is discussion. Secondly, within the SLFP also some of the leading members who are with Rajapaksa attend the central committee meeting of the SLFP. Mahinda Rajapaksa can’t afford to be out of the SLFP. He’ll lose his base and they can take disciplinary action.

In my view, as time goes on he will lose the base support he has, because times are changing and the younger voters are not with him. So if they miss out on the younger voters, there will be other parties who will try to cater to them. As our policies succeed, people will realise that Mahinda Rajapaksa was a failure. I can’t see a comeback by him, because when people make a change they never go back to the status quo. If they want to make another change, they will look at something new. But I don’t think that will happen because people like the idea of the two main parties working together. They want to see the delivery taking place, that’s what we are focussing on. Once the delivery is assured, it will cease to be a major problem. Till then you’ve got to live with a thorn on your side, and I think our political parties are capable of doing that.
 
You are remaking the Constitution — although it’s not by a Constituent Assembly but a Constitutional Assembly, and you are bound by the rules of the 1978 Constitution.We are not in any way challenging the authority of Parliament. But we have set ourselves up as a committee of thewhole of the Parliament, which focusses only on the Constitution.

And there is a Steering Committee which will send in the interim reports. And the Assembly which will debate. So once we have a final draft, we will send it to be passed by the Constitutional Assembly and sent to Parliament.

How is that going, the time frame?

Well, the six sub-committee reports are out. The Steering Committee now has to deal with the important ones — the nature of the state, religion, the exercise of executive, legislative,
and judicial power. Those are some of the items. And the replacement of the executive presidency… Those are the key ones being handled by the Steering Committee and once the debate on the six sub-committee reports is over in the first week of January [2017], we will present the report of the Steering Committee to the Assembly. Then the real debate on the nature of the Constitution will begin. It has to go to Parliament, be passed by two-thirds of Parliament, and then finally a referendum.

It’s fairly fast-tracked?

It can be fast-tracked.

You have the numbers in Parliament?

We have the numbers in Parliament.

And you hope that those who have reservations or are opposing some of these changes…
I think some of them will come along.

So the stakes are very high.

Yes, the stakes are always high in Sri Lanka!

Is everyone agreed on doing away with the overbearing executive presidency?

Yes, they have agreed. We are giving three options — for how the Prime Ministerial system should function. [The first option is the pure Westminster system. The second is a system where the Prime Minister is elected directly. The third option would require political parties to declare their Prime Ministerial candidates before the elections. In all three options, the President would be a non-executive head of state.]

The attitude of the Tamil parties, the Tamil National Alliance seems to have been very constructive…
Yes, very constructive, I must say. They have been taking part, they are very, very positive. I was there in the group that worked up to 1987. But this is the first time we are trying to do a Constitution without any party having an overall majority, not to speak of a two-thirds majority. That is good because we are striving to find common ground.

Will there be a measure of agreement on devolution?

You already have the 13th Amendment.

There will be a measure of agreement because we discussed the matter with the Chief Ministers. Seven Chief Ministers are from the UPFA. Eight actually, if you take Trincomalee also.
The UNP sits in the opposition but we discussed with the Chief Ministers and with the leaders of the opposition and had separate sessions with the Governors. And there is a three-member sub-committee which we appointed to do an ad hoc report on the relationship between the Centre and the Provincial Councils.

What’s different this time in the negotiations on the Tamil question?

I think everyone accepts the need to resolve it. Part of it is outside, that’s the type of work we have to do on releasing land, helping people… On this question of the nature of the state
I can’t find a major issue coming on that — we’ve got over a lot of the difficulties, there’s a little bit more to be done.

I suppose the challenge is to avoid veering in one direction or the other and finding a formulation to say that Sri Lanka must be united, it is one but...People want that, yes.

Without getting trapped in terminology?

No. The Indian government has also said it must strengthen the 13th Amendment. Now actually we have got to deliver to the Tamil people and that’s not a matter of law.
 
Let’s look at the elephant in the room, the Opposition which is adopting a nationalistic position. We see this political trend in India, you have it here as well. The cry will go up that the nation is in danger, or there’s a danger of separatism, etc. Is such a scenario far-fetched?

We’re all patriots, we’re all nationalists. So we have no problem dealing with anyone who wants to raise that cry. They will find that people don’t accept it. What we will decide on the nature of the state and other issues will be acceptable to everyone. We are politicians.

As for the international demands [for an investigation into war crimes], they have been moderated or have quietened down?

Yes, we also co-sponsored the [UNHRC] resolution. I can’t see a major hitch on that.

Obviously, it is desirable to have maximum support or unanimity for this process of changing the Constitution, making the changes you have referred to. Is that achievable?

Well, we are trying to get unanimity. Let’s see when the Steering Committee report is out.

Are you engaging in discussions with Mr. Rajapaksa and others?

We are trying to meet him next week, the Leader of the Opposition and I. [The meeting took place soon after the interview.] And with former President [Chandrika] Kumaratunga. We’ve already met with the President. On the international front, starting with India…
Things have been working out well with India. We are looking at trying to get the Economic and Technological Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) through. There has been general goodwill
on both sides. The fishing issue must be resolved.

Is it continuity or change in the Sri Lanka-India relationship?

It has been quite good for a while. Continuity.

The main outstanding issue with India is the fishermen’s issue, isn’t it?

Yes, it’s the fishermen’s issue. We should sort it out. We shouldn’t allow that issue to… My sympathies are with the northern fishermen who say, ‘now let us fish in our own waters.’
Which is now possible.Which is now possible, and the pressure is going to come from the North.From Tamils…Tamils.

Coming back to the ETCA with India — you wanted it signed by the end of 2016. How does it fit into your economic vision for the country?

India seems to have indicated that the agreement can’t be signed until mid-2017.

Have there been areas of substantive disagreement between Colombo and New Delhi in the negotiations?

There aren’t areas of substantive disagreement. I think they’re discussing it step by step. We would have liked it in 2016, but we can also still make room for it to be in 2017. But we would like it to take place in 2016-17, because the FTA [Free Trade Agreement] with China and the FTA with Singapore will both be signed in the early part of 2017. We will regain the facility of preferential exports to EU through the GSP Plus facility. We want the Indian agreement also quickly. Because, one, the Indian agreement paves the way for a tripartite [arrangement for trade and investment] by 2017 — Sri Lanka, India, and Singapore. The agreements we have between us mean that we are at the crucial entry points of the Bay of Bengal and we can work further on a closer economic union within the Bay of Bengal [region]. For that to succeed also, we require the agreement with India, because the five southern States [Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Kerala] and Sri Lanka — the total GDP of such an economy is over $500 billion with the possibility of doubling to a trillion dollars within a decade or so. The potential is enormous, so with our agreements with Singapore and with China, on their ‘One Belt, One Road’ initiative, it is imperative that we sign the agreement with India as fast as possible.
 
If we can turn to some major developments in international relations…

We must look at the whole issue of international relations now after the referendum in the U.K. and the election of Donald Trump as the next President of the U.S. I think people have sent a message. I don’t think any of the countries want to give up the dominance that they have but there should be a rearranging of priorities, which also I think would require Asia — the Asian countries — to see how we can increase cooperation. After all, we are the next growth centre, next to the West.

Has Brexit adversely affected or benefitted Sri Lanka?

Not benefitted us. We are worried that if there is a downturn, it can affect some of our exports. Britain has to work out what they want — is it a hard or a soft exit, they are still not clear. Then, if they want to re-establish the economic relations within the Commonwealth, they’ll have to come up with some plan because there are so many players now, not only the U.K. And the bulk of the Commonwealth nations are around the Indian Ocean.

What do you expect for our region from President-elect Donald Trump when he takes over?

He’ll do a new approach. There will be a reorganising of priorities, but so far the names for the cabinet show that he has picked some good choices — they will be right-wing, but then
he came on a right-wing populist agenda. So let’s see how it goes and what his style would be.
  
I don’t see the kind of perturbation there is in some other parts of the world, or even in the U.S., in India or Sri Lanka. Is it that you just accept it?

They have voted and we must fit into it. And we never had the TPP [Trans-Pacific Partnership]. The TPP really was against us. It left China out, it left India out, it left South Asia out, Indonesia didn’t get into it. I think in a way it doesn’t harm us at all and we can now work our own arrangements out. So first we feel as Asian countries that India, China, Japan must have some arrangement on economic cooperation within Asia. We have rivalries but we must work for that; there will be pressure for that. And once you get it going, you can see still that whatever problems there are in Japan or in the Chinese economy, it is still growing. India is growing at the fastest rate. Both the U.S. and the EU will have to deal with us.

Australia wants to come in with Asia, it’s very clear, New Zealand, even the East African Coast must come into this. I think India has a lot of personal connections at that level.

Sri Lanka’s relations with China continue to be good?
Yes, it continues.

Any change?

No change. We discussed, we had some outstanding matters. We stopped the port city to ensure that it was in conformity with the laws, it’s going on and we found that land was the best we could get to have our financial city. Hambantota — we have negotiated debt-to-equity swap and industrialisation. And then Singapore's Surbana Jurong is designing Trincomalee. But India has indicated that they want to be involved and that’s good by us. And maybe Japan. We have taken into account India’s security concerns, the fact that China wants to expand as an economic power —  those are ones that we can balance and Japan has been a steadfast supporter of Sri Lanka.

There have been some controversies about the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. Are you over that?

I am the one who first initiated an internal inquiry; they gave the report; I gave it to the Parliament. And even in the new Parliament, I allowed the Committee on Public Enterprises to go ahead. The chairman was a member of the JVP —  we all supported him, still support him. And they have made their recommendations; it’s unanimous, the recommendations for further inquiry. There are different views on the rationale or the reasoning, but it shows the parliamentary system is working. And I have submitted all the papers to the Attorney General, so that’s no longer within my purview.

To sum up, would you say the overall situation is markedly different from what it was before the presidential and parliamentary elections of 2015?

Certainly different, more hopeful.

You have been in government for a very long time, in politics, in the opposition. Is this situation qualitatively new?

After 1977, yes, it’s qualitatively new and the fact is that most of the countries in Asia are also thinking that way. Starting in 1977, we were the exception and it took some time. China
and India came along. We are also looking at new arrangements, we are in talks with India about how we can strengthen economic cooperation in the Bay of Bengal. I mean the population around the Bay of Bengal — the Indian States around it, the hinterland, plus the others — it’s twice the population of the European Union. There’s much more scope for growth.

You have thought about this for some time.

Yes, that’s why I want the ETCA also to come on because, on the one hand, we can have ETCA and the Singapore FTA with us. Secondly, the five southern States and Sri Lanka can make a very powerful combination.

"சயனைட்" நாவல் - ஒரு பார்வை

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