Sri Lanka | |
Sri Lankans' fury forced the powerful Rajapaksa clan out. Now its heir is running for president | |
2024-09-16 | |
[DHAKATRIBUNE] When an uprising ousted Sri Lanka's president, many saw it as the end of his powerful family's hold on the island nation after more than 12 years of rule. Now, as Sri Lanka prepares to elect a new leader, Namal Rajapaksa is running for president. The 38-year-old is the son of former prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and the nephew of the ousted president Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Namal is presenting himself as an agent of change, but many see his bid for presidency as an attempt by the controversial political dynasty to regain power. By mid-2022, the clan's political career seemed in ruins. Some of its members were forced into hiding in military camps after angry protesters stormed their residences. Others simply gave up their seats in the government as people blamed them for hurtling the country of more than 20 million people into an economic crisis. Two years later, the family — shunned and pushed to political wilderness — is trying make a comeback via the Rajapaksa heir apparent who is styling himself as someone who could deliver Sri Lanka into a prosperous future. But for Namal, it's more than just a political choice — it's a deeply personal one. He wants to shed the widespread allegations that the Rajapaksa clan ran the country as a family business that led to the economy crashing in 2022 — as well as the guilty verdict on corruption charges against them. ''The corruption charges are not something common to my family or to myself. If you look at all politicians in this country or in the world, including our region — all have been accused of being corrupt,'' Namal told the News Agency that Dare Not be Named (AP) on a recent afternoon. ''People will understand, you know, because if you look at the current stage, everyone is blaming each other.'' Sri Lanka was once an economic hope in South Asia, before it plunged into an economic crisis in 2022 when unsustainable debt and the Covid-19 pandemic led to a severe shortage of essentials. The crisis morphed into a popular uprising, with angry street protesters taking over the president's and prime minister's offices and other key buildings, forcing Gotabaya to flee the country and later resign. Many blamed the Rajapaksas. The family still had a big parliamentary majority, and voted Ranil Wickremesinghe to serve the remainder of the presidential term. Wickremesinghe ensured them protection in return for their support to pass laws in Parliament, enabling the clan to mark a return in politics. ''We didn't run away, we never bravely ran away. It's just that some people thought we were hiding,'' said Namal. Namal's prospects for a political comeback appear grim, as the main contest appears to be between three other candidates: Wickremesinghe, the parliamentary opposition leader and a left-leaning politician with a powerful alliance. Alan Keenan, senior consultant on Sri Lanka at the International Crisis Group, said the younger Rajapaksa's bid for the presidency is a test run that would establish ''his position as the heir apparent'' of the political dynasty. ''I think they (the Rajapaksas) know that Namal will not win. But his candidature effectively reasserts the family's ownership of the party,'' Keenan said. The Rajapaksa family has been a mainstay in Sri Lankan politics for decades. They influenced nearly everything — from bureaucracy to courts, police, business and sports. Namal's father was a prime minister and then a two-term president from 2005 to 2015. Even though Mahinda Rajapaksa was adored by the country's majority Buddhist Sinhalese for defeating the ethnic Tamil separatists after a 26-year bloody civil war, allegations of human rights ...which are often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless... violations and corruption led to his defeat in 2015. The family, however, returned more powerful four years later, when Mahinda's brother was elected president. Gotabaya Rajapaksa whipped up majority Buddhist Sinhalese sentiments after the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings, blamed on Islamic krazed killer groups, killed 290 people. But the family's popularity quickly eroded under a tanking economy and alienation among ethnic Tamils, Moslems and other minorities. With hopes to reinvent himself as a young, modern leader removed from his family's tainted past, Namal's efforts mirror that of his father, who still enjoys considerable support among some voters who credit him for crushing the Tamil separatists. Like his father, Namal wears the trademark outfit that highlights his Buddhist Sinhalese culture, with a maroon scarf around his neck, a sarong and a white robe. During campaigns he can be seen touching his father's feet in reverence, a practice most locals consider noble. He is also promising to free the island nation from its debt crisis, create more jobs and eradicate corruption by digitizing the administrative systems. Five key runners in Sri Lanka's presidential race [DHAKATRIBUNE] The majority-Buddhist island nation of around 22 million people will head for polls on September 21
Related: Sri Lanka: 2024-07-30 Iran says it has seized a tanker carrying counterfeit oil in the Persian Gulf Sri Lanka: 2024-07-24 IRGC navy confiscates Indian/Sri Lankan tanker carrying smuggled fuel Sri Lanka: 2024-07-24 Lefty mob floods U.S. Capitol ahead of planned ''Day of Related: Rajapaksa 09/04/2022 SriLanka’s ousted President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has been provided with an official residence and security by the government after returning to the country Rajapaksa 08/17/2022 Sri Lanka to end state of emergency: President Rajapaksa 08/06/2022 Green Myths and Hard Realities: Sri Lanka as a Warning | |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |||
German FM says 'purely military approach' not the solution in Gaza; CIA, MI6 urge Israeli ‘compromises’ to get hostages back, detailed ceasefire proposal imminent | |||
2024-09-08 | |||
[GEOTV] German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said on Friday that a military approach alone was not the solution to Israel's war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
That's what they always said about the Tamil Tigers, too. Anybody remember them?
CIA director says more detailed Gaza ceasefire proposal due in days [GEOTV] CIA Director William Burns, the chief US negotiator trying to help secure a ceasefire in Gaza and the release of hostages by Hamas, said a more detailed proposal on the ceasefire would be made in the coming days. "We will make this more detailed proposal, I hope in the next several days, and then we'll see," Burns said at an FT event in London on Saturday. Related: Annalena Baerbock</strong> 09/07/2024 Germany Boosts Gaza Aid And Tells Israel To Stop Provocation Annalena Baerbock 08/19/2024 Phone taps, sabotage and an assassination plot: Is Germany in Cold War 2.0? Annalena Baerbock 06/02/2024 German FM Baerbock Is Considering German Participation In Gaza Protection Force | |||
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International-UN-NGOs | |
UN Special Coordinator says 'no such thing as military solution' after Dahieh strike | |
2024-07-31 | |
Just ask the Tamil Tigers.
"The Special Coordinator underscores once again that there is no such thing as a military solution and calls on both Israel and Leb ![]() to avail of all diplomatic avenues to pursue a return to the cessation of hostilities and to recommit to the implementation of resolution 1701 (2006)," a statement issued by her office said. The Special Coordinator is "in close contact with key interlocutors and urges for calm to prevail," the statement said. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Bou Saab: War is not the solution |
2024-01-11 |
[An Nahar] Deputy Speaker Elias Bou Saab said he met with Speaker Nabih KnobbyBerri ...Speaker of the Lebanese parliament, head of the Amal Shiite party aligned with Hezbollah, a not very subtle sock puppet of the Medes and Persians... on Wednesday was to put him in the picture of the meeting that he has held in Rome with U.S. envoy Amos Hochstein. "Of course Mr. Speaker knew of the visit before I went to Rome. The Rome meeting was aimed at preparing for the meetings that will be held in Beirut with the U.S. envoy," Bou Saad said after the Ain el-Tineh talks, hoping Hochstein’s visit "will be a step towards achieving the needed stability in Leb ![]() ." Addressing the Israelis, Bou Saab stressed that "war cannot return the settlers to their settlements." "It will subject them to further displacement, perhaps to more distant settlements," he warned. "It might make this issue protract, not for months but maybe for years to come," the Lebanese official cautioned. "War is not the solution. "Just ask the Tamil Tigers, the Nazis, and Napoleon Bonaparte." "If the objective is to return settlers to their settlements, we have the same objective, which is the return of all (Lebanese) villagers to their border villages and farms. The solution should come through diplomatic means and efforts and no one can find any other solution," he emphasized. Nearly three months of cross-border fire have killed more than 185 people in Lebanon, including over 140 Hezbollah fighters, but also more than 20 civilians including three journalists. In northern Israel, nine soldiers and at least four civilians have been killed, according to Israeli authorities. The fighting has also displaced tens of thousands of Israeli and Lebanese residents on both sides of the border. Related: Elias Bou Saab: 2022-10-12 Bou Saab hands demarcation draft to Aoun, says Lebanon secured 'full rights' Elias Bou Saab: 2022-10-04 Lebanon to send unified comments on draft maritime deal to US official by Tuesday Elias Bou Saab: 2022-06-07 Round-up: Lebanese fussing powerlessly about Israel’s offshore natural gas extraction Related: Amos Hochstein: 2024-01-06 More than 76,000 people in southern Lebanon displaced by cross-border fighting between Israel, Hezbollah Amos Hochstein: 2023-12-20 Israel said pushing US to secure deal that will push Hezbollah 6 miles away from border Amos Hochstein: 2023-12-17 Bibi presser: Day after war, IDF will maintain responsible for security in Gaza |
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Sri Lanka |
Sri Lanka to get new president next week amid political and economic meltdown |
2022-07-12 |
[NYPOST] Sri Lanka’s parliament will elect a new president on July 20, its speaker said on Monday, after protesters stormed the residences of the current president and prime minister, who have both offered to quit amid an economic meltdown. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who had overseen a ruthless crushing of the Tamil Tigers snuffies as defense secretary, is set to resign on Wednesday. His brothers and nephew earlier quit as ministers as Sri Lanka began running out of fuel, food and other essentials in the worst crisis since independence from Britannia in 1948. Parliament will reconvene on Friday and will vote to elect a new president five days later, Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena said in a statement. "During the party leaders’ meeting held today it was agreed that this was essential to ensure a new all-party government is in place in accordance with the Constitution," the statement added. "The ruling party has said the prime minister and the Cabinet are ready to resign to appoint an all-party government." Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, whose private home was set alight by protesters, has said he will step down. His office said Rajapaksa had confirmed his resignation plans to the prime minister, adding that the cabinet would resign once a deal was reached to form an all-party government. |
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India-Pakistan |
An unlikely profile |
2022-04-28 |
[Dawn] TUESDAY’s suicide kaboom at the Bloody Karachi ...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous... University may be the harbinger of a new and unexpected dimension in the dynamics of terrorism in Pakistain, particularly the Baloch insurgency. It was appalling enough that a jacket wallah had targeted the faculty of the Confucius Institute on campus, killing three Chinese nationals and their Pak driver on the spot. But the shock was further compounded when the identity of the attacker came to light. Less than an hour following the incident, the banned Baloch Liberation Army took to social media to claim responsibility and announce that the bomber was a woman named Shaari Baloch. Details emerging later revealed her to be a highly educated mother of two young children, belonging to a well-established family and working as a school teacher in her native Turbat, Balochistan ...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it... . Moreover, it appears that no one in her close family was missing or had ever been forcibly disappeared — all of which adds up to an unlikely profile for a suicide bomber. It does, however, suggest that the insurgency is evolving in a direction that makes it imperative for the authorities to revisit their approach to it. Suicide attacks, which involve an implicit belief in a reward in the afterlife for the act of ’self-sacrifice’, have almost always been the preserve of religious Death Eater groups, with some notable exceptions such as Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers. Much like the latter, the Baloch insurgency too is based on a secular ideology, and the KU bombing is among few such attacks perpetrated by the separatists. The phenomenon of Enforced disappearances, profiling of Baloch students at university campuses, the province’s lack of agency over the proceeds of its natural resources, etc have exacerbated the yawning deficit between the people and the state. That combined with increasing access to information via social media and deeper engagement in nationalist discourse has seen young Baloch become less reticent about expressing their anger and resentment, even in interactions with the military’s big shotship. It is a critical point in time. That said, to attack soft targets is utterly reprehensible. And for teachers to be singled out, as happened in the latest instance, is all the more surprising given that the current insurgency is distinguished from its previous iterations by the fact that its support base largely comprises educated young Baloch. For there to be any possibility of peaceful coexistence, the Baloch must shun such acts of senseless violence and the authorities reach out to them. |
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Terror Networks |
The Case of the Missing Archive |
2022-02-06 |
by Theodore Dalrymple [TakiMag] Some people come to hate what their profession suggests that they should love: Many librarians hate books, for example, at least if their way of treating them is any indication. Not a few would like to dispense with books altogether, replacing them by computer terminals so that they no longer have to deal with fatuous requests by scholars and would-be scholars for obscure volumes hidden in the back shelves. When librarians sell off books that they deem to be surplus to requirements—libraries no longer being repositories of knowledge but more like fast-food outlets, so that something that has not been in demand for a certain length of time is struck off the menu—they take their revenge on the hated, tyrannous objects by defacing them with marker pens, in the process reducing their market value so that the library will have fewer funds with which to replace them by other hateful books. You can just imagine the joy of Quebecois librarians as 30,000 children’s books, deemed poisonous to children’s minds, were cast onto bonfires, the ashes used to fertilize newly planted trees in order to save the planet. “It is difficult to imagine a whole archive being thrown away thoughtlessly; it is much easier to imagine it being thrown away, or rather destroyed, thoughtfully.” Book burning, which Heine warned led eventually to the incineration of people, is essentially futile, at least in the long run, for it is rarely that every last copy of any book can be burnt; the burnt book is able to take its revenge by reappearing at some time in the future. Far worse than book burning, then, is the loss of an archive that contains unique and original documents. This is what happened, or was done, to an archive that a friend of mine, Jillian Becker, sold to Leicester University. Having published novels with success about her native South Africa, she researched and wrote a world best-seller about the Baader-Meinhof gang called Hitler’s Children. She then researched and published a book about the Palestine Liberation Organization. Not surprisingly, she was now fascinated (and appalled) by the phenomenon of terrorism and set up an Institute for the Study of Terrorism in London. I visited it several times in its unmarked basement offices. At the time, I enjoyed the slightly cloak-and-dagger atmosphere of this. I was still a young man. For the six years of its existence, the Institute researched terrorism around the world, often at some risk to its staff. It was consulted both by governments and by companies anxious to reduce their risks, and it published booklets on such movements as the Tamil Tigers and Sendero Luminoso. Newspapers and other media called on it for confidential and reliable information. With the end of the Cold War, however, its funding dried up. The Institute had discovered that much of the terrorism in Europe was encouraged and funded by the Soviet Union, from which the funders drew that natural but mistaken corollary that with the downfall of the latter, the problem of terrorism was more or less solved. Jillian Becker knew otherwise but was unable to persuade her donors that the Islamists would take over from where the Soviets had left off. The Institute was therefore wound up, but in its six years of active existence it had accumulated a valuable archive that it was imperative to preserve. It contained unique documents retrieved from terrorist headquarters, interviews with former terrorists who had repented of their activities, confessions, photographs of crime scenes, names and biographies of perpetrators, and the like. In 1993, the Institute sold the archive to the University of Leicester for safekeeping. Read the rest at the link |
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India-Pakistan |
NIA arrests former LTTE intel wing member in Kerala arms, drugs smuggling case |
2021-10-08 |
[OneIndia] The National Investigation Agency has arrested a key conspirator in the Vizhinjam arms case. The agency arrested Satkunam alias Sabesan, a Sri Lankan national in connection with the case. The NIA said that he was a former member of the intelligence wing of the LTTE ...the Tamil Tigers, formally the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, is a plain vanilla Socialist ethnic liberation movement in northern Sri Lanka, crushed in 2009 after a 26-year civil war. Their claim to fame was normalizing the civilian suicide bomber, subsequently copied with great enthusiasm by various jihadi movements. Despite having been crushed, the remnants pop up from time to time, because revolution is much more fun for some than getting a job and getting on with life... and was residing at Valsaravakkam, Chennai, Tamil Nadu. He was involved in arms and drug trafficking from Pakistain to Sri Lanka. The funds were being used for the revival of the LTTE, the NIA said.The case was registered by the NIA based on the complaint by the NCB that five AK 47 rifles and thousand rounds of 9mm ammunition were seized along with 300kgs of heroin off Minicoy coast upon interception of the fishing vessel Ravihansi by the Coast Gaurd on March 18 2021. The probe has revealed that the accused had arranged conspiracy meetings of LTTE sympathisers in India. He had also played a crucial role in routing the proceeds of drug trafficking to former LTTE cadres in Sri Lanka for the revival of the outfit. Related: Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam: 2019-04-22 Day 2: Sri Lanka explosions, what we know so far: 24 arrested, 290+ dead, 8 kabooms +1 defused Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam: 2017-07-13 Sri Lanka: Buddhism to remain paramount in new charter Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam: 2017-06-10 Banned DeM operates freely in Kashmir |
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Sri Lanka |
Sri Lanka scraps Tamil national anthem at Independence Day |
2020-02-05 |
[DAWN]
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Sri Lanka |
Symbolic swearing-in for Sri Lanka's new president |
2019-11-19 |
[DAWN] Sri Lanka's new president and scourge of the Tamil Tigers Gotabaya Rajapaksa on Monday urged minorities unnerved by his election victory to work with him, as he was sworn in at a ceremony steeped in symbolism for his core supporters. Having spearheaded the brutal end of the Tamil separatist war a decade ago, Rajapaksa is a divisive ...politicians call things divisivewhen when the other side sez something they don't like. Their own statements are never divisive,they're principled... figure but popular among his own majority Sinhalese-Buddhist community. His landslide win split the island nation of 21.6 million on religious and ethnic lines as never before, seven months after deadly terrorist attacks. Unusually, his inauguration was held at a revered Buddhist shrine with an imposing stupa ‐ reputedly built by a Sinhalese king who vanquished invading Tamils over 2,000 years ago. At the ceremony, Rajapaksa put his success down to the "extraordinary blessings of the Buddhist monks". "The main message of the election is that it was the Sinhala majority vote that allowed me to win the presidency," the 70-year-old retired lieutenant colonel said. "I knew that I could win with only the votes of the Sinhala majority. But I asked Tamils and Moslems to be a part of my success. Their response was not what I expected. However, some people are alive only because it's illegal to kill them... I urge them to join me to build one Sri Lanka," he said. Rajapaksa was defence chief under his brother Mahinda's 2005-15 presidency, when the military conducted a no-holds-barred campaign to end the 37-year war in which 100,000 people perished. |
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Sri Lanka | |
'Terminator' Rajapaksa storms to victory in Sri Lanka election | |
2019-11-18 | |
The retired lieutenant colonel, nicknamed the "Terminator" by his own family, won 53-54 per cent of the vote, his front man told AFP as Rajapaksa's main rival Sajith Premadasa of the ruling party conceded the race. "It is a clear win. We envisaged it. We are very happy that Gota will be the next president. He will be sworn in tomorrow or the day after," front man Keheliya Rambukwella said. Rajapaksa, 70, had a 49.6pc share of the vote with close to six million ballots counted. He is the younger brother of the charismatic but controversial Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was president from 2005-15. Results from Sinhalese-majority regions ‐ the Rajapaksas' core support base ‐ were expected to push this above 50pc. Premadasa, 52, of the ruling party was trailing at 44.4pc. He had strong support in minority Tamil areas and a poor showing in larger Sinhalese constituencies. Election Commission chairman Mahinda Deshapriya said at least 80pc of the 15.99 million eligible voters participated in Saturday's poll, which was marred by isolated violence that left several people injured. Rajapaksa conducted a nationalist campaign with a promise of security and a vow to crush religious extremism in the Buddhist-majority country following the April 21 suicide kabooms blamed on a homegrown jihadi group. Related: Gotabaya Rajapaksa: 2010-04-22 Fonseka rails against 'injustices' at opening of Sri Lankan parliament Gotabaya Rajapaksa: 2009-05-23 How Sri Lanka's military won Gotabaya Rajapaksa: 2009-05-19 Tiger dead, a secret spills Related: Tamil Tigers: 2018-03-09 To Putin, Assad’s enemies in Syria are the same as Russia’s in Chechnya Tamil Tigers: 2017-11-10 The ideology of a genocide Tamil Tigers: 2017-07-28 European Union’s top court keeps Hamas on terrorism list Related: Mahinda Rajapaksa: 2019-09-18 Opening of Sri Lanka’s tallest tower marred by corruption allegation Mahinda Rajapaksa: 2019-04-29 Day 9: Sri Lanka raids headquarters of hardline group suspected in church bombings Mahinda Rajapaksa: 2018-11-16 Sri Lankan lawmakers fight in Parliament over PM dispute | |
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