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Iran: Foreign Ministry Statement Concerning US Government Executive Order

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In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful

The decision of the Government of the United States to impose restrictions on the travel of Muslims to the United States – though temporarily for three months – is a clear insult to the Islamic world, and especially the great nation of Iran; and despite claims of being made to combat terrorism and protecting the people of the United States, it will be recorded in history as a great gift to extremists and their supporters.

While the international community needs dialogue and cooperation to address the roots of violence and extremism in a comprehensive and inclusive manner, and at a time when the United Nations General Assembly approved by consensus the proposal of the President of the Islamic Republic of Iran for a World Against Violence and Extremism (WAVE), the imprudent decision of the U.S. Government to apply collective discrimination against citizens of Muslim countries will only serve to provide a fertile ground for more terrorist recruitment by deepening the ruptures and fault-lines which have been exploited by extremist demagogues to swell their ranks with disenfranchised and marginalized youth, and further promote their campaign of hatred, violence and extremism.Moreover, with this decision, the reports of U.S. intelligence and security organs and past statements of current US officials which emphasized on the role of the United States and its regional allies in fomenting and expanding extremist groups, including Daesh (ISIL), appear to have been conveniently forgotten.

The decision of the Government of the United States to target the people of Iran and clearly insult all sections of this great nation has put on clear display the baselessness of the U.S. claims of friendship with the Iranian people while only having issues with the Government of Iran. It also shows the rancor and enmity of some in the US government and influential circles both within the United States and abroad towards all Iranians around the world: The Iraniannation who, benefiting from an ancient and rich civilization and religious beliefs founded on humanitarian values, has always promoted the message of constructive engagement, not only resisteddomination but also the temptations to dominate others, and fought extremism and violence; a resilient nation which has stood firm in the face of extremist terrorists and which was among the first victims of organized terrorism; a great people which has had no presence in any extremist terrorist operation, but instead in all societies in which it has traveled or resided as scientists, students, entrepreneurs, tourists or immigrants, has been known as one of the most law abiding, cultured, educated and successful communities, thus representing its Iranian and Islamic culture and civilization in the most dignified and peace-loving manner.

To ensure respect for the dignity of all members of the great Iranian nation at home and abroad, the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran will engage in a careful assessment of the short and medium-term impact of the decision of the U.S. Government on Iranian nationals, and will take proportionate legal, consular and political action and while respecting the American people and differentiating between them and the hostile policies of the U.S. Government – will take reciprocal measures in order to safeguard the rights of its citizens until the time of the removal of the insulting restrictions of the Government of the United States against Iranian nationals.

In order to monitor the implementation of this decisionand adopt appropriate measures commensurate with national interest in specific cases, a mechanism is established in the Ministry of the Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran with the participation of relevant organizations.

Meanwhile, all diplomatic and consular missions of the Islamic Republic of Iran have been instructed to prioritize the provision of consular facilities to all Iranian nationals who due to the illegal step of the Government of the United States have been prevented from returning to their places of residence, work and education.

The decision of the Government of the United States incorporates certain requests that are illegal, illogical and contrary to international law. Considering the absence of relations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States, those requests are not applicable to and cannot be accommodated by the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Any abuse by the United States of this situation to prolong the discriminatory measures and cause any further inconvenience for Iranian nationals is not only illegal but against common sense.

The Islamic Republic of Iran will carefully examine and legally pursue any negligence or violation of the international obligations of the United States under bilateral agreements and multilateral arrangements and reserves the right to respond as deemed necessary.

Source: Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs


US: Trump Delivers Blow To Refugees, Says HRW

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United States President Donald Trump has announced several policies that will cause tremendous harm to refugees and do little to address terrorism and other national security threats, Human Rights Watch said Saturday.

In an executive order signed on January 27, 2017, Trump announced he would suspend the US refugee program for at least 120 days and indefinitely for Syrian nationals; cut the total number of refugees of any nationality who can be resettled under the program to 50,000 in fiscal year 2017; and ban entry to the US of nationals from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen for at least 90 days, as well as nationals from a list of countries to be determined.

“Trump’s latest executive order is likely to hurt the people most in need: those fleeing violence and terrorism – and on Holocaust Remembrance Day, no less,” said Grace Meng, senior US researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The decision to drastically curtail the refugee program will abandon tens of thousands to the risk of persecution or worse and cede American leadership on a vitally important issue.”

Trump’s executive order to suspend the refugee program and ban entry from a list of countries to be determined because these countries purportedly do not provide adequate information for security vetting disregards the fact that refugees identified for US resettlement are, by US statute, people for whom the US has found “a special humanitarian concern.” They have been thoroughly and extensively vetted and screened.

Refugees come from all over the world, from a diverse range of religious and economic backgrounds, but have in common that they are all fleeing persecution. Vetting procedures are already so vigorous that deserving refugees are often excluded. In fact, many refugees who have been admitted to the US, from Syria or elsewhere, are the victims of terrorism. At a time when there are more displaced people around the globe than at any time since the end of the Second World War, the Trump administration’s decision to drastically curtail the US refugee program abandons Washington’s leadership role on this issue. It also rejects longstanding bipartisan support for the resettlement program and undermines commitments to US allies such as Jordan and Kenya, who host hundreds of thousands of refugees.

Trump also suspended for 90 days the issuances of visas to all people – immigrants or nonimmigrants – seeking to enter the US who are nationals of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, or Yemen. The order directed the Department of Homeland Security to identify any other countries whose nationals should also be barred.

During his presidential campaign, Trump called for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States” until the US government can “figure out what is going on.” Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, his national security advisor, has called “Islamism” “a cancer” that has to be “excised,” while Mike Pompeo, CIA director, has publicly disparaged Muslim leaders, claiming wrongly that they have generally refused to speak out against attacks committed by Muslims.

Trump stated in an interview with the Christian Broadcasting Network on January 27 that persecuted Christians would be given priority when applying for refugee status, and also claimed inaccurately that it was harder for Christians from Syria to enter the US than Muslims.

The order also directs the Secretary of State to prioritize admission of refugees claiming religion-based persecution “if the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual’s country of nationality.”

“Today’s executive order doesn’t bother to hide the religious animus that underpins it,” said Meng. “Such policies convey fear instead of courage and will send a message to leaders around the world that broad, discriminatory, and isolationist actions are acceptable.”

Mexico’s Bishops Respond To Trump’s Border Wall

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The bishops of Mexico on Thursday reacted to United States’ president Donald Trump’s executive order to build a wall on the nations’ border by urging a more thoughtful response to legitimate security concerns.

“We express our pain and rejection over the construction of this wall, and we respectfully invite you to reflect more deeply about the ways security, development, growth in employment, and other measures, necessary and just, can be procured without causing further harm to those already suffering, the poorest and most vulnerable,” the Mexican bishops’ conference said Jan. 26 in a message titled “Value and Respect for Migrants”.

Trump had Jan. 25 ordered a wall to be built on the U.S.-Mexico border. An estimated 650 miles of the 1,900 mile-long U.S.-Mexico border have a wall constructed currently.

The Mexican bishops noted that for more than 20 years, the prelates of “the northern border of Mexico and the southern border of the United States have been working” to achieve “the best care for the faithful that live in the sister countries, properly seen as a single city (from a faith perspective); communities of faith served by two dioceses (such as Matamoros and Brownsville, or Laredo and Nuevo Laredo, for example).”

“What pains us foremost is that many people who live out their family relationships, their faith, work or friendships will be shut out even more by this inhuman interference,” they lamented.

The bishops recalled the statement of Bishop Joe Vasquez of Austin, head of the United States bishops’ committee on immigration, that “this action will put immigrant lives needlessly in harm’s way. Construction of such a wall will only make migrants, especially vulnerable women and children, more susceptible to traffickers and smugglers. Additionally, the construction of such a wall destabilizes the many vibrant and beautifully interconnected communities that live peacefully along the border.”

The bishops of Mexico said that “we will continue to be close to and support with solidarity so many of our brothers coming from Central and South America, who come in transit through our country to the United States”

The prelates also encouraged Mexico’s authorities “in talks and seeking agreements with the United States, to advocate for just ways, which safeguard dignity and respect for persons, regardless of nationality, creed, and above all, appreciating the richness they bring in their quest for better opportunities in life. Each person has an intrinsic and invaluable worth as a child of God.”

The bishops expressed their respect for the right of the U.S. government to have its border respected, but said they do not consider “a rigorous and intense application of the law to be the way to achieve its goals, and that on the contrary these actions create alarm and fear among immigrants, breaking up families without further consideration.”

The prelates concluded their statement asking Our Lady of Guadalupe to “accompany those in both countries who are responsible for negotiations” and to “bring consolation and provide protection for our brother migrants.”

Trump, Putin And Internet Are Transforming Russian Language – OpEd

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How great a long-term impact Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, and the Internet will have on Russia remains to be seen, but the three in varying degrees and in varying ways are already changing the Russian language in ways that merit attention because the way people use words both reflects and shapes how they think and behave.

Kseniya Turkova who keeps track of language issues for the Snob portal has written before about the linguistic games Russians have been playing with Trump’s name (snob.ru/selected/entry/116376), but this week she focuses on the impact he is having on the Russian language itself (snob.ru/selected/entry/119873).

Given what Russian television critic Elena Rykovtseva as described as the Russian media’s decision to “feed” Russians morning, noon and night with stories about Trump, Turkova says, it isn’t surprising that Trumpisms are penetrating the language. They’re even being tracked at the hashtag #trampologia.

This week the main Trump language question, however, was one he didn’t initiate directly but rather provoked by his installation as president. Russians are troubled, the language specialist says, on how would should spell “inauguration” in Russia and exactly what its various verbal forms mean.

One language site on the day of Trump’s inauguration offered a test for those visited it. The site asked its readers how many errors were in the word otingurirovali. The correct answer was two: the misspelling left out the letter У and inserted the letter И instead of the letter Ы. The correct spelling, transliterated should be otynaugurirovali as ugly as that sounds.

In the same column this week, Turkova points to what she says is Putin’s latest contribution to the Russian language which he has earlier enriched by his use of vulgarisms and criminal underworld slang. This time, she says, he offered a euphemism, describing prostitutes who supposedly cavorted with Trump, as “girls of lessened social responsibility.”

Russian reaction to this was fast and furious, with perhaps the most widespread comment being that “the girls” involved showed not “lessened” social responsibility but rather a “heightened” one if you looked at things from a different angle. But the media is delighted to have yet another euphemism for prostitute: they’ve had difficulty coming up with anything new in that sector recently.

Finally, the impact of the Internet on Russian, which has already having a greater influence on the language that either Trump or Putin could hope for, is now being tracked in a new study soon to be published of a “Dictionary of the Language of Internet.ru” (echo.msk.ru/blog/govorimporusski/1917690-echo/).

Aleksandr Piperski, one of the compilers, tells Ekho Moskvy that it is “practically impossible” to draw a clear border between Russian conversational speech and Internet language because the Internet has become so ubiquitous. Terms from the Internet, and often from its English portion, are rapidly making their way into everyday Russian.

But something more interesting is happening, he suggests. Brilliant turns of phrase, which Russians call “winged words,” are now coming fast and furious and disappearing almost as quickly as they appear in the first place. That represents a major change from the pre-Internet past where they arose rarely but lasted for a long time.

Another thing the Internet is doing is degrading spelling and even definitions in the real world. Because there are no clear rules for spelling on the web, Russians see and often copy mistaken spellings and usages that are from a formal point of view wrong. If they see it on the Internet, they are inclined to believe it must be true.

Asked who makes up the audience for his dictionary, Piperski suggests that the largest component of it will be the mothers and fathers of web surfers who spend so much time on line that they now speak a language with which their parents are not familiar.   The new dictionary should help this older generation make the necessary translations.

Impact Of Genetics On Human Height Is Not Increasing

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The relative impact of genetics on height does not increase with improvements to the standard of living. These are the findings of an international research group which analysed the impact of genetic and environmental factors on adult height over a span of more than a century. The research material comprised 40 twin cohorts, including more than 143,000 twin pairs from 20 countries.

According to the study, no clear trend is apparent in the proportion of height variation explained by genetic differences between individuals, or heritability, -between the birth year cohorts from 1886 and 1994.

“Our results do not support the assumption that the heritability of height increases as the standard of living improves and extreme poverty is reduced,” said researcher Aline Jelenkovic from the University of Helsinki.

Based at the Department of Social Research, Jelenkovic participated in the research group’s analysis of the significance of genetic and environmental factors on adult height.

Environment more significant for women’s height

The study showed that height variation caused by genetic differences was generally more pronounced among men than women. Conversely, environmental factors had a bigger impact on the height variation among women.

“This is to say that women’s growth is not more resistant to environmental influences than that of men,” Jelenkovic explained.

Height variation lowest in East Asia

When geographical-cultural regions were studied separately, height variation was lowest in East Asia and greatest in North America and Australia. The geographical differences in height variation can be attributed to both genetics and environment.

Hereiditability estimates by geographical-cultural regions did not show a pattern across birth cohorts.

“Even though mean height has increased over the 20th century as standards of living have improved, this is not reflected in the heritability of height,” said Jelenkovic.

The study was published in the international eLife paper Genetic and environmental influences on adult human height across birth cohorts from 1886 to 1994.

Variation in adult height in human populations is caused by individual genetic differences and environmental factors. Twin and family studies have consistently shown that the proportion of height variation attributable to individual genetic differences is approximately 80%. There has been a long-term hypothesis that the impact of genetic factors is weaker in populations with low living standards, as poverty can lead to a lack of basic necessities which are important for human growth.

The increase in mean height observed in many parts of the world during the 20th century reflects the improvement in the standard of living.

Melanoma Death Rates To Fall By 2050

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By 2050 the death rates from malignant melanoma will have decreased from their current levels but the numbers of people dying from the disease will have increased due to the aging of populations.

However, if new treatments for the deadly skin cancer prove to be effective, the numbers of deaths could fall too, according to research presented at the European Cancer Congress 2017  on Sunday.

Ms Alice Koechlin, from the International Prevention Research Institute in Lyon, France, told the meeting that people who were at highest risk of dying from melanoma were those born between 1900 and 1960 when not only were the dangerous effects of exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation from sunlight largely unknown, but also health professionals believed that sunshine was positively beneficial.

“These beliefs were boosted by observations that exposure to ultraviolet light and sunshine could heal some skin infections and rickets, and by the discovery of vitamin D,” she said. “It was common for babies and school children to be treated with commercial UV radiation-emitting devices and exposed, unclothed, to the midday sun. This fashion faded in the 1960s as effective treatments, such as vaccines and antibiotics, became available and people became aware that sun exposure and sunburn during childhood were strong risk factors for developing skin cancer in later life.”

Ms Koechlin, Professor Philippe Autier and colleagues used statistical models to work out whether current cancer death rates were due more to the effects of age, the year of birth (which takes into account exposure to cancer-causing agents such as sunshine during early life), or to the recent introduction of new medical technologies or treatments.

They used the models to estimate the numbers of deaths from melanoma for the period 2014-2050 in Australia, the USA and Sweden. They produced two estimates: one based on the assumption that there was no available effective treatment for melanoma, and the second on the assumption that there was a treatment available that resulted in a 25% reduction in melanoma deaths from 2015 onwards, assuming that all patients had access to these treatments.

They found that death rates from melanoma peaked around 2015 for Australian men and 1990 for Australian women, around 2005 and 1995 for US men and women respectively, and around 2010 in both Swedish men and women.

The researchers predicted that in 2050 death rates in Australia would be two-fold lower than in the peak years, falling back to rates seen in 1970 for men and before 1960 for women. For men the death rate adjusted according to the ages of populations (age standardised rate) was nine deaths per 100,000 of the population in 2010; in 2050 this is predicted to fall to four per 100,000. For women, the rates fall from 3.5 to 1.7 per 100,000.

In the USA, rates would be two and a half to three times lower than in the peak years, falling to rates that prevailed before 1960. The age standardised death rate would fall from four to 1.6 per 100,000 men and from 1.7 to less than one per 100,000 women.

In Sweden, the 2050 rates would be one and a half times lower than in peak years, falling to rates seen around 1985. The age standardised death rate would fall from five to three per 100,000 men in 2050, and from 2.7 to 2.1 per 100,000 women in 2050.

However, because of the aging of populations the actual numbers of deaths from melanoma would continue to increase until 2030-2035. For instance, in Australia the numbers of men dying from the disease would increase from 1007 in 2010 to 1354 in 2030, falling back to 1124 in 2050. In women they would increase from 410 in 2010 to 570 in 2030, falling back to 544 in 2050. [2]

The researchers predicted these numbers based on the assumption that no effective therapy exists for melanoma.

“With an effective therapy, we would expect to see decreases in the number of melanoma deaths from 2030,” said Ms Koechlin. “In 2050, the numbers of melanoma deaths in Australia would be equal to those of around 2005: 846 men and 408 women. In the USA they would be equal to those of around 1990 for men with 3646 deaths, and to 1980 for women with 1876 deaths. In Sweden they would be equal to those of around 2000: 231 men and 174 women.

“As time passes, melanoma deaths will become steadily rarer in people younger than 50 years, and after 2050, practically all melanoma deaths will occur in people over the age of 70.”

She concluded: “Our findings clearly show that most of the death toll due to melanoma has been caused by medically-backed exposures to highly carcinogenic UV radiation between 1900 and 1960. They also show that UV-protection of children pays off because rates of melanoma death keep going down from around 1960 to the current day as the UV protection of children based on clothing, shading and avoidance of excessive sun exposure has spread in most light-skinned populations, starting in Australia.

“Skin screening, based on the opportunistic early detection of skin cancers, does not affect melanoma mortality and our analyses confirm this evidence. So, generations that have been over-exposed to high UV doses keep the high probability of developing a deadly melanoma at some stage in their lives. The good news is that the risk declines rapidly as skin protection increases, and that effective treatments are starting to be available. But we still have a long way to go before we will have affordable therapies able to prolong survival from advanced melanoma by several years with a decent quality of life.”

Chair of the Congress and President of ECCO, Professor Peter Naredi, from the Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, who was not involved with the research, commented: “This study by Autier and colleagues is very interesting. Malignant melanoma is one of our most common cancers and we have tried different ways to increase awareness about protection and early diagnosis. If the predictions are right, protection from sun exposure is one of the best examples of primary prevention and this study proves all efforts to protect a population from unhealthy amounts of sun exposure are worthwhile.”

Oscar-Winning Actress Emmaunelle Riva Dies At 89

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Emmaunelle Riva, the French actor whose 60 year career came to a triumphant climax with her Oscar nomination for Michael Haneke’s Amour, has died. Riva, who had cancer, died on Friday night, January 27 in Paris, but was working until last summer, when she made a film, Alma, in Iceland and performed at the Villa Medici in Rome, The Guardian said.

Riva was 26 when she moved from rural France to Paris with hopes of becoming an actor, achieving her goal soon afterwards with the leading role in Hiroshima mon amour (1959). The stark story of a failing romance between a French actor and a Japanese architect, it was directed by new wave pioneer Alain Resnais and scripted by Marguerite Duras. Eric Rohmer called it “the most important film since the war, the first modern film of sound cinema”.

Riva continued to work with France’s key young directors, including Gillo Pontecorvo on Kapò (1959), Jean-Pierre Melville on Léon Morin, Priest (1961) and Georges Franju on Thérèse Desqueyroux, for which she won best actress at the 1962 Venice film festival.

Riva maintained a commitment to serious film and theatre throughout her career, later collaborating with Krzysztof Kieślowski on Three Colours: Blue (1993) and Julie Deply on Skylab (2011). But it was in 2012, at the age of 85, that Riva finally found international fame, as Anne, an octogenarian music teacher being cared for by her husband (Jean-Louis Trintignant) after a series of strokes.

The film took the Palme d’Or in Cannes and was acclaimed as a modern masterpiece.

Speaking to the Guardian, Riva described how she and the crew kept the atmosphere lighthearted on set, despite the film’s deep bleakness.

“So much laughter, so many funny things. I remember once, when I was playing dead, I had to stay quite still. But when the crew went to look at the monitor, they came back laughing. I said, ‘What’s so funny?’ and they told me that my toes were wiggling. My toes! I didn’t even know they could see them. So I had to do the whole scene again and concentrate very carefully. I think my feet have a will of their own.”

Riva went on to win the best actress Bafta the following year, before travelling to the Oscars, which were held on her 86th birthday. She missed out on the best actress prize there to Jennifer Lawrence for Silver Linings Playbook, although the film did win the Academy Award for best foreign language film.

Famed in France for her discretion and reserve, Riva, who never married and had no children, kept her final illness private. But she did profess herself pleased by her late turn in the limelight.

“[Amour] is such a wonderful, marvellous, extraordinary gift,” she said in 2012. “I cannot tell you how happy I am. Completely happy. The whole thing is like a fairytale.”

Search For ‘Hopeful Spots’ As Funding Cuts Threaten UN – Analysis

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By Ramesh Jaura

While a drastic cut in U.S. contributions is hanging like a Damocles’ Sword over the head of the new UN Secretary-General António Guterres, senior Government officials and civil society representatives have stressed the “nexus” between enduring peace and sustainable development, urging the need to raise awareness about such a link beyond the world body’s headquarters in New York.

Goal 16 of the Agenda for Sustainable Development that highlights the importance of the need to “promote just, peaceful and inclusive societies” underlines such an innate bond, they say, but it has escaped wider public and diplomatic attention – one year after the United Nations started implementing Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) endorsed by 193 member states in September 2015.

With this in view, the General Assembly organised in a landmark step a two-day high-level dialogue on January 24-25 underscoring the innate link between sustainable development and sustaining peace.

Highlighting the importance of the “security-development nexus”, Yerzhan Ashikbayev, Kazakhstan’s Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs said, security challenges around the world were threatening development gains. For its part, Kazakhstan had vowed to concentrate efforts on preventing and putting an end to armed conflict regionally and globally.

However, there remained an “unfortunate lack of trust” between nations, he said, urging the UN to fast-track its mediation efforts. New avenues had recently opened in that regard, including through the Security Council’s widening thematic obligations and closer cooperation between the United Nations various organs.

Spotlighting the lack of resources as a major development challenge, he called on Member States to consider channelling 1 per cent of their defence budgets to the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.

“Multifaceted challenges require multipronged responses,” he said, noting that efforts to promote Goal 16 on peaceful, just and inclusive societies were particularly relevant in that regard. At the national level, Kazakhstan was working to integrate the Goals into its strategies on the basis of democratic governance, the rule of law and the protection of human rights.

Earlier, addressing the General Assembly for the first time since taking office on January 1, UN Secretary-General Guterres said: “We need a global response that addresses the root causes of conflict and integrates peace, sustainable development and human rights in a holistic way, from conception to execution.”

Inequality remained high around the globe, he said, with the world’s eight richest individuals holding the same wealth as its 3.6 billion poorest. People and entire countries felt they had been left behind, with devastating new conflicts erupting and old ones remaining intractable.

Echoing that sentiment, Sujata Mehta, Secretary of the Ministry of External Affairs of India, drew attention to chronic disparities and continued inequality, as well as the emergence of non-traditional challenges such as violent extremism.

Technology continued to shrink the world and the lives of people in distant countries were increasingly intertwined, with economies tied ever closer, pandemics able to spread more easily and terror networks able to strike anywhere.

At the same time, economic growth, inclusive development security and general human well-being were closely linked, she said, so that their enjoyment anywhere in the world had implications elsewhere.

Noting that the link between peace and development underpinned both the Paris Agreement and the 2030 Agenda, she nevertheless said that progress since then had been “less than encouraging”, with pushback from donors in financing those agreements.

“Walking back from commitments made can harm us all,” she warned, calling for a deeper focus on longer-term development. “We live in a global village,” she added, calling on States to commit to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and on the United Nations to back them.

Nigeria’s Anthony Bosah said sustainable development, peace and economic growth must be guaranteed and he urged coordinated efforts in that regard. The 2030 Agenda and the quest for sustainable peace were parts of a unified whole. It was disconcerting that the drivers of violence – some new, others long-standing – had drastic implications for international and regional efforts to support countries in moving beyond conflict.

Welcoming the United Nations efforts to build synergies between the new Agenda and sustainable peace through partnerships with regional and subregional organizations, he said the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) had made significant achievements in resolving conflicts.

‘Benchmark in truth-telling’

General Assembly President Peter Thomson of Fiji, an island country in Melanesia in the South Pacific Ocean, said that the adoption of the sustaining peace resolutions by the Assembly and the Security Council had signalled a new, cross-sectoral, comprehensive and integrated approach to peace and development.

Calling on participants to explore mutually reinforcing ways to sustain peace while delivering on the 2030 Agenda’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals, he also urged them to make the dialogue a “benchmark in truth-telling” on the subject.

“Taken in tandem, the 2030 Agenda and the sustaining peace resolutions make it clear that Member States regard sustainable development and sustaining peace as two agendas that stand or fall together,” Thomson said, emphasizing the need to generate unstoppable momentum in implementing the SDGs and to recognize that sustainable peace was both an enabler and an outcome of sustainable development.

Protracted conflict currently affected 17 countries, he said, adding that 2 billion people lived in countries troubled by fragility, conflict and violence. Ninety-five per cent of refugees and internally displaced persons in developing countries had meanwhile been affected by the same 10 conflicts since 1991.

The General Assembly President also emphasized the need for action and reform by the United Nations system under the leadership of the Secretary-General, with the active support and engagement of Member States, and noted that the proceedings of the two days would contribute to preparations for a high-level meeting on peacebuilding and sustaining peace to be convened during the Assembly’s seventy-second session later this year.

2030 Agenda a universal tool

Margot Wallström, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden and President of the Security Council for January, speaking on behalf of the Council, said she recently attended a meeting of the Arctic Council in Norway at which scientists painted a bleak picture of the Arctic environment.

One of the scientists, asked how he could sleep at night, replied that he preferred to look for “hope spots” where solutions could be discussed, she said, adding that the high-level dialogue could be such a “hope spot”. “In these times of nationalism, polarization and fear, we can send a message of hope that change is possible,” she said.

Referring to the Security Council’s open debate earlier in January on conflict prevention and peacebuilding, she said Member States must consider their will and capacity to act on reports of potential conflict, as well as the tools at their disposal.

The 2030 Agenda was a universal tool that required all countries and people to be involved in peacebuilding and prevention, she said, emphasizing the need for strong institutions and good governance as set out in Goal 16.

She underscored the importance of risk management, root causes, early warning and early action; for the United Nations to strengthen its cooperation with other organizations, including the World Bank; and the role of women in contributing to early warning and alternative conflict prevention measures. Preventing conflict was also economically the smart thing to do, she said, with more effective conflict prevention resulting in less development spending on humanitarian assistance.

Ambassador Macharia Kamu of Kenya, speaking in his capacity as Chair of the Peacebuilding Commission, called the SDGs a road map to achieve a more resilient world, and encouraged Member States to grasp the dialogue as a starting point for the Organization to fulfil its promises on the matter. “This meeting will go down in history as a milestone for the work of peace,” he said.

Ry Tuy, Cambodia’s Permanent Representative to the UN, pointed out that his country knew all too well about the cost of conflict, adding that building sustainable peace for all was among its top priorities. As education was central to building peace, Cambodia’s National Strategic Development Plan focused on expanding equal economic opportunities for men and women.

Speakers from the Maldives and Trinidad and Tobago discussed peace and development in the context of climate change, with the former proposing that vulnerable small island developing States be given a seat on the Security Council to ensure that the issue remained on its agenda “while there is still time to act”.

Zamora Rivas, El Salvador’s Permanent Representative to the UN, said peace agreements and political reforms had enabled his country to overcome armed conflict. Despite that significant achievement, however, he said El Salvador needed socioeconomic development for all segments of society, and called upon the Secretary-General to provide the requisite support for that to occur.

Zimbabwe’s Frederick Makamure Shava, President of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), was among the many speakers highlighting the links between the 2030 Agenda, the Addis Ababa Action Agenda on Financing for Development, the Paris Agreement on climate change and the review of the United Nations peacebuilding architecture, which together had paved the way for a better, more inclusive and sustainable world.

Civil society representative Julienne Lusenge, speaking for the Fund for Congolese Women and the Female Solidarity for Integrated Peace and Development, was among several speakers who shared concrete experiences with such conflict drivers, including the illicit exploitation of natural resources and the resulting unequal distribution of wealth in her home country, the Democratic Republic of Congo.


Prime Minister May’s Hard Brexit – Analysis

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By Giancarlo Elia Valori*

The speech of the British Prime Minister, Theresa May, delivered on January 17 at Mansion House, foreshadows a new and more global Britain, but above all entails the end of the European Union as we know it today.

Thirty years after the speech delivered by Margaret Thatcher at Lancaster House in 1988, when the conservative Iron Lady accepted the European single market and the freedom of movement and trade within Europe, a new conservative Iron Lady states she is ready to leave the European Union and the European single market.

In the European Union, Great Britain has always experienced Germany’s marked hegemony that it has tried to control both by entering the European Union and then deciding to leave it, as it is currently doing.

Great Britain never wants hegemonic powers in its way: neither the EU nor the Franco-German Europe, nor even the possible EU of the South, with the alliance between Italy, Spain, Greece, the Balkans and Austria.

In fact, the documents of the Bank of England on the euro have always been very clear: we do not want the single currency because, as Great Britain, we are a global power and the only counterpart for the Commonwealth, and we do not accept a Mark disguised as European currency, namely the euro, which is the result of a pact – proposed by Margareth Thatcher herself – between those who did not want German reunification and Germany itself.

The core of the issue was as follows: Germany could be reunited but it had to give its currency as ransom.

At that time the Italian President of the Republic, Francesco Cossiga, was in very close contact with Margaret Thatcher, on the one hand, and Helmut Kohl on the other.

He carried out a strong and necessary mediation activity.

Hence, in his recent speech, Theresa May has made it clear that Great Britain wants back its full sovereignty on migration issues, which will be the axis of the future “engineering of nations” and the primary tool for controlling and managing the labour force, its complexion and cost. She also wants full sovereignty on customs – another essential factor in the relationship between Great Britain and the European Union.

Hence, following the traditional model of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA), May’s government will manage a series of trade agreements with the individual EU and non-EU countries. Obviously what will be missing in the Euro-British regulations will be richly offset by the new economic relations between Great Britain and its wide Commonwealth, as well as between Great Britain and Donald Trump’s United States.

Let us wonder, however, whether the United States still need the European Union – this is currently the real question.

In fact, only the US weight and clout did enable France and Germany to create the first pan-European institutions and only Great Britain did act as a strategic and economic counterbalance to ”Rhenish Europe”, the one that Charles De Gaulle defined as “the United States’ Trojan horse”.

Indeed, before the vote on Brexit, it was precisely Great Britain to strongly support the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), which was designed as a geoeconomic alternative to the probable fragmentation and disruption of the European Union.

Hence Brexit has had a long-standing gestation and it will completely change the EU strategic and economic landscape.

It was worth recalling that it was Prime Minister Edward Heath to bring Great Britain into the European Common Market in 1973 – a choice reaffirmed by the outcome of the referendum held by Wilson two years later.

However, throughout the 1980s, the European integration process slowed down significantly and, therefore, in those years the City of London created wealth with its monetarist policies of high interest rates. This enabled the holders of UK government bonds to make excellent profit and also enabled the City to stabilize its rates without adhering to the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM).

In 1986 Thatcher’s financial reforms established a close link between the City and the US financial system – a link which will obviously make Brexit even stronger.

However are the United States really interested in having a “Little Britain”, which will no longer be the trusted channel with the EU, or will they strengthen the traditional ties of the Anglosphere between Britain and the United States?

And what will be the geopolitical and financial link between one of the largest economic areas of the globe, namely he EU, and the United States, which cannot certainly afford to neglect Europe?

Certainly Donald Trump was clearly in favour of Brexit and, after taking office, he will be the first world leader to receive Theresa May at the White House on January 27th.

Moreover, it is well-known that President Trump does not like the European Union. He prefers to deal with the individual EU Member States, but this does not mean that Europe is not still decisive in the US strategic and economic framework.

Do the United States want to keep united and friendly a great commercial and political area, namely the EU, which acts as a rampart vis-à-vis the Russian Federation and the Arab and Islamic world, or do they want to deal only with its Member States, thus destroying the Union and paving the way for Chinese and Islamic capital?

We will soon see Donald trump’s proposals in this regard.

Moreover, the origin of the European Monetary Union lies exactly in its unusual and asymmetrical relationship with the United States: the slow creation of the single currency stems from the crisis of the Bretton Woods agreements, created specifically by the United States, by the strong exchange rate volatility in that phase and, above all, by the US refusal to restore a global monetary balance.

Only China and, in other respects, the Russian Federation are currently interested in redesigning, with the EU, a new international monetary and financial system which will be based on a basket of currencies at variable exchange rates in a predefined range.

Furthermore today Germany does no longer need a highly regulated economy, mediating between capital and labour, as was the case until 2000 and up to the financial crises of 2006 and 2009.

Hence Germany can further financialize its economy by lending euro to its periphery and hence maintaining extremely high trade surpluses, as currently happens, or can invest directly in the US system through the City.

The United States will always have a growing share of high-interest and short-term “toxic” assets.

Moreover, regardless of Brexit, the City’s trading and transactions with the United States and the European Union have decreased significantly.

London’s financial centre does not yet know whether to invest in the EU or elsewhere in the world, especially in China or in the BRICs and the British government’s participation in the new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank proposed by China has created strong tensions with the United States. Said tensions will persist if the North American financial markets maintain their growth.

Another problem not to be overlooked is that neo-liberal policies, from Thatcher onwards, have deeply divided Great Britain socially and geographically.

In Great Britain the Gini coefficient, a statistical measure of social inequality, has risen from 0.26 in 1979 to the current 0.4.

The gap between the rich London and the South of the country and the increasingly poor North is particularly evident.

All this could lead to an inherent weakness of the British political system, irrespective of the party in power.

Moreover, as many commentators have noted, also Donald Trump’s election is a kind of Amexit: the US unilateral withdrawal from the post-Cold War global system, which had not been well negotiated and was based on the Russian and Chinese strategic void filled by an America which was becoming the only global power.

This is no longer the case – the United States are no longer the “indispensable nation”. With President Trump, the United States will no longer act as the world’s policeman and, in the North American decision-makers’ minds, Brexit means that the EU shall either break up or rebuild itself as a real Union.

Also NATO which, until Barack Obama’s Presidency, denied to Russia and China the right to their natural spheres of influence – often with suicidal intentions – will be a US (and British) direct instrument or an inter-European mechanism which, however, the EU Member States shall pay largely by themselves – and today’s Europe has certainly neither money nor strategic ideas.

Moreover, Theresa May’s Brexit is not yet well-defined within the British political scene: the Supreme Court’s ruling has forced the government to seek approval from Parliament before formally starting negotiations on Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty. The Scottish National Party wants to remain in the EU and threatens to hold a second referendum on the separation between Scotland and England and it also wants to table over 50 new amendments to the law for Britain’s withdrawal from the EU according to Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty.

The Labour Party itself wants to slow down the process of separation between Britain and the Union, although it will generally vote in favour of Brexit in Parliament.

The Tories have no majority in the House of Lords and the Bremain supporters could cause problems to Prime Minister May’s government.

Hence if – as currently everything leads us to think – President Trump manages the new relationship with Britain vigorously, the UK economy will be granted full and free access to the US financial and non-financial market, without forgetting that Prime Minister May wants better strategic and military cooperation with the United States, both for renewing the Trident missile system and for tackling the other matters relating to global intelligence.

As a result of Brexit and the consequent British full entry into the US economic and strategic sphere, the EU will be less effective also at military and intelligence levels.

Hence we will see what will happen on January 27 next, after Prime Minister May’s meeting with President Trump in Washington.

At technical and legal levels, the British Prime Minister intends to close the economic negotiations between her country and the EU Member States before the end of the procedure pursuant to Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which also means she wants to avoid “cliff edge”, namely the tariff and economic cliff edge of spring 2019, the moment of real Brexit.

Not surprisingly, Prime Minister May talks about an “implementation phase” from now until 2019, before the end of negotiations with the EU on Article 50.

The political and strategic significance is very clear: Prime Minister May wants to stay on good terms with the EU area but, if Europeans want to “punish” Britain, London will become a centre for the trade, financial and political war against the European Union.

If the EU has a punitive attitude vis-à-vis the UK on Article 50, Britain will become a low-taxation and low- regulation economy; it will gradually acquire a large part of European industries and will wage a tariff and financial war against the EU and its Member States.

Not to mention the City’s finance, which will be directed against the euro area and will support any aggressive US dollar operation.

Or any aggressive operation of other countries, which will certainly come to the fore against an ever weaker Euro.

Currently the global economic trends are clear: increased uncertainty on global financial markets, which favours emerging economies and their countries of reference, such as Russia and China; reduced dependence of peripheral markets from those of the First World economies (the so-called decoupling) and the rise of China’s public debt.

Probably, the growth of public spending in the United States will add other crisis factors on the global scene, while we must not neglect the agreement between Russia and OPEC for reducing oil extraction and the related increase in oil barrel prices.

The EU may remain the old regional union of the Cold War and it will be bound to break up under the combined pressure of Brexit and Trump’s Presidency in the United States, or may become smart and hence start or extend negotiations with Israel, the non-EU Balkans’ area, South Korea and Singapore – obviously in addition to China and Russia – for a new Eurasian economic union.

About the author:
*Professor Giancarlo Elia Valori
is an eminent Italian economist and businessman. He holds prestigious academic distinctions and national orders. Mr Valori has lectured on international affairs and economics at the world’s leading universities such as Peking University, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Yeshiva University in New York.He currently chairs “La Centrale Finanziaria Generale Spa”, he is also the honorary president of Huawei Italy, economic adviser to the Chinese giant HNA Group and member of the Ayan-Holding Board. In 1992 he was appointed Officier de la Légion d’Honneur de la République Francaise, with this motivation: “A man who can see across borders to understand the world” and in 2002 he received the title of “Honorable” of the Académie des Sciences de l’Institut de France

Source:
This article was published by Modern Diplomacy

Reflections On Bangladesh – OpEd

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I was in Bangladesh around the Christmas time. During this time of the year, many couples get married, which allowed me to attend a few of such events, almost every night I was in either Chittagong or Dhaka. Such events allowed me to connect and chat with some old friends and relatives. As usual, we discussed latest developments in the country; they also wanted to know about president-elect Donald Trump and the upcoming days in the USA under his new administration.

In olden days, it was customary to have the wedding parties in bride’s home and rarely in hotels or convention centers or halls. Now it is just the reverse case with most events held in convention centers/halls, which can cost anywhere from one hundred thousand Taka (78 Taka is equivalent to 1 US dollar) to a million to rent the place for half a day.

These convention halls/centers can host anywhere from few hundred guests to thousands. I am told that the demand for such centers are so high that one must book at least six months in advance to avoid any unpleasantness with planning such events. Obviously, most medium-income to high-income earning city-dwellers don’t mind spending a hefty bundle for their loved ones in such events, once again proving higher buying/spending power of many Bangladeshis these days. Fortunately for the guests, no gifts need to be brought into a vast majority of these events where the hosts seek only blessings for the newlyweds.

On the day I landed in Chittagong from Dhaka, I was pleasantly surprised that my childhood friend Babul’s (Anwar Chowdhury) daughter was getting married that day. I came to the event with a small gift that I had bought in the USA (in case I attend such events), and faced some resistances from my friend to accepting my gift for his daughter. Ultimately, I succeeded to put the gift in his pocket.

I had the opportunity to also attend a mejban (an event in which thousands of people – mostly the poor, neighbors and friends – are invited to eat food) in a relative’s paternal house in Sitakund, located some 22 miles from the port city of Chittagong. Some of my relatives came from Hong Kong and the Far East to attend the event. (By the way: I missed our own mejban hosted by my father in our Khulshi properties by just three days in which some five thousand people were fed. Fortunately, my younger brother Shameem was able to attend the event.)

I was also able to attend my old friends from the BUET Group-77 on the 30th of December. They have been hosting such reunions every year for nearly 40 years. However, this was my first one in all these decades. With everyone growing old and some having changed drastically physically, it was difficult for me to recognize many of my old classmates. Nonetheless, it was a pleasant event to recollect our old days.

Some of my BUET friends are in the real estate business, which has been suffering terribly. They blame government policy of imposing unusually excessive sales tax for the trouble. Many construction projects, thus, remain unfinished; those that are complete don’t have buyers. Unless this flawed policy of excessive sales tax is corrected, they see little hope of any recovery. This is disastrous because of the value housing sector creates in boosting the overall economy for a developing country. If the government of Sheikh Hasina is serious about growth and prosperity for all, it must seriously look into this matter and correct the problem immediately.

Any visitor to Bangladesh cannot miss the obvious signs of massive infrastructure development projects, esp. in the Roads (including railway) and Highways sector, that are underway. Inter-city/town highway/freeway and rail communication service is going through a massive overhaul under Hasina administration and has significantly eased the pain of long-distance commuters significantly. Railways runs on time without any delay. However, commuting inside any city is a different story. It is a nightmare for most commuters! Although some overpasses (locally called ‘flyovers’) are being built, the city planners have not been able to keep up with the phenomenal growth of city population. With manually paddled tri-cycle rickshaws equally competing with other motorized vehicles in many inner city roads, as expected, their slow speed is dictating the pace in most roads. Waiting in a road junction can take several minutes, adding to frustration of everyone. As a result, the number of trips that a rickshaw puller or a taxi driver could do is decreasing significantly, which makes it very difficult for them to survive on a dwindling income.

The capital city of Dhaka is a megacity with a population in excess of 18 million people with another 6 million people coming daily from adjoining towns for their work. It is now ranked 11th amongst the major megacities in our world, just behind New York City. [In 2030, Dhaka is expected to have a population of more than 27 million.] Chittagong has a population of 8 million with another 2 million floating commuters. No new roads have been built within the city limits except some overpasses. So during rush hours, which can last from no later than 8 a.m. to until no earlier than 10 p.m., commute inside any of these major cities could be very time consuming. Just a car commute from the Dhaka’s international airport to Shahbagh area can take anywhere from an hour to five hours, depending on the traffic jam.

Many of my entrepreneurial friends who are still active tell me that they spend four to six hours a day on the road sitting in their cars while trying to attend to their businesses or meetings or returning home. I had some taste of such painful commuting experiences anytime I tried to meet someone or attend an event.

Added to their daily commuting pains are the loud sirens stemming from passing ambulances that they must bear. Many of the hospitals happen to be in the heart of the cities, which bring in patients that need emergency care. Ambulance sirens have, thus, become a regular nuisance for city-dwellers. I, however, failed to understand the rationale behind such sirens given the fact that there is no space available for other vehicles to make room for these ambulances. Already 4-lane roads are being used bumper-to-bumper as if these are meant for 6-lane traffic. So, no one gives or can afford to make space for any ambulance to move faster. Most city roads during rush hours look like parking lots with very little movements.

I wish hospital authorities and municipal authorities had looked into this chronic problem and banned sirens when such are not delivering their intended results.
Sirens from the ambulances are not the only avoidable pains for city dwellers. They must also endure similar loud sounds or horns from vehicles carrying dignitaries – ministers, judges, etc. And they are too many of such dignitaries in Dhaka! For a gridlock city like Dhaka it goes without saying that unless all major government offices (plus the secretariat), including the prime minister’s office, are moved away from the heart of the city commuting pains are not going to ease away any time soon. In the meantime, the government may like to seriously consider using helicopters for commuting its ministers. Such measures can do wonders in terms of reducing lost hours of most commuters.

What surprised me most is that price of most food items are much higher in Bangladesh than here in the USA. The only exceptions seem to be rice and vegetables. Even though salaries of all employees have gone up several fold, most low-wage earners can ill-afford to eat meat in weeks.

Salaries have gone up for all employees, esp. those employed in the government sector, which remains the most corrupt organ within the society. Since coming to power, the Hasina administration has also been providing multiple bonuses for government employees, e.g., for the two Eid festivals and Bengali new year. Such incentives and overtures, seen mostly as appeasements to strengthen or solidify support for the ruling party, create undue pressure upon the struggling already marginalized private sector, which employs more than 95% of the job force. Already the latter is burdened with overtaxing, VAT and other forms of government abuses like the bribes, so such ill-advised government policies to appease the corrupt employees within the government sector are doing no good. Not only are such flawed policies leading to monetary inflation these are also discouraging employers from hiring new employees.

It should be mentioned here that the rationale behind increasing salary and bonus payment for the government employees was to deter them from indulging in bribery. Forgotten there is a very basic understanding of human nature: reform of character needs sticks and carrots. Simply feeding carrots do more harm than good. Thus, in the absence of a viable check and balance system, bribery continues to be institutionalized and shows no sign of ebbing an iota. It won’t be an exaggeration to say that no government institution or ministry is free of this curse.

In today’s Bangladesh, if anyone wants to get something done from the government sector, he/she must be willing to pay bribes. It is a sad commentary but a nasty fact tolerated by most Bangladeshis!

In this case, let me share a personal story. I had the opportunity of visiting a government election/voting registration office in Chittagong that issues national ID cards. This is part of the much-touted Digital-Bangladesh program, led by prime minister’s son – Sajeeb Wazed Joy, which is meant for making life of all Bangladeshis better. However, like most initiatives and programs in the government sector in Bangladesh, it is infested with corruption.

Nearly a year ago, a relative of mine had applied for her National ID card. She was given a small sheet of the application form showing her application number. Nearly six months ago, when the office was contacted to find the status, she was told that it was not ready yet. Last month, when the same office was contacted, the young government officer sitting behind the desk-top computer informed us that her entire file was missing and that no information on her application was available in the computer. He openly sought bribe to look into the matter. As of now, we still don’t know whether he can find the ‘missing’ file, this in spite of ultimately meeting his demand for extortion/bribe money (commonly called ‘speed’ and ‘sweetening’ money).

By the way, I am told by my friends and relatives that such briberies have become the new norms in Bangladesh where every government employee, with rare exceptions, preys upon ordinary citizens without any fear of accountability. Something has definitely gone rotten in Bangladesh!

On my way to Sitakund from Khulshi area of Chittagong by car, I noticed some heavy trucks that had rammed into concrete dividers. Upon inquiry, I was told that many of the inter-city trucks like to transport goods at night, and some of them can actually be sleep-driving (some may even be under drugs), thus, getting into such accidents. Their choice for driving at night is sometimes an imposed one because of the ban to enter a city during day time; and sometimes it is solely to avoid (or reduce the likelihood of) paying ‘passage’ money to all those extortionists – from on-duty police (or their civilian agents) to local touts (mostly affiliated with the local MPs) who demand a hefty money to let the truck go through. I am told that some of the truck drivers end up paying nearly five to ten thousand taka for a single trip of few hundred miles. This is the price that they must pay to transport essential goods or provide services in Bangladesh! Where is Bangladesh heading!

While the number of tax payers has somewhat increased, they only represent a small fraction of eligible taxpayers. As a result, government taxation has gone up several folds in recent years to pay for all the government projects. Most taxpayers see the system highly oppressive and corrosive. Thus, the tendency to cheat is ever increasing. Without any effective opposition within the Parliament, budget discussion has become a joke! Whatever budget is formulated and presented by the finance minister eventually gets approved, and the tax-paying citizens must live with and pay for such government excesses.

I am reminded by some of my friends who teach in universities that Bangladesh is now one of the most taxed third-world countries. Unfortunately, tax-paying citizens are not getting the needed benefits for their paid taxes. Most cities and towns remain filthy; dumped garbage litter everywhere (esp. on the footpaths) and is rarely collected on time; open sewerage is everywhere with clogged lines that are infested with mosquitoes; pedestrian footpaths are rarely accessible for walking (because of vendors, dumped garbage, etc.); many roads remain unrepaired in many towns and cities; quality of drinking water is bad; and the list goes on adding people’s miseries and sufferings.
City municipal taxes in Chittagong city is about 17% on the income. However, to harass apartment or building owners often the tax collectors would put an estimate that is as high as the total income drawn from such assets. Again a personal story may suffice to convey the message here.

My father owns a 3-story house ‘Prantik’ (of approx. 2,500 square feet per floor on Zakir Hossain Road in East Nasirabad, Khulshi thana, Chittagong) where my siblings and I grew up some half a century ago. Nearly ten years ago, my parents converted the house to a women’s dormitory so that college/university going female students and young professionals can reside there for an affordable rent. The management of this facility (called ‘Shanti Niketan’ hostel) is handled by a distant cousin of mine. We collect fifty thousand taka as rental money per month from her. However, last year, the city corporation tax was estimated at Taka 7,00,000, which is more than total collected rental in a year (i.e., Tk. 6,00,000). Forget that there are other incidental expenses to upkeep the facility, and that according to City Mayor’s office while only a max. of 17% of the income (which is only Tk. 102,000) should be paid as tax, the corrupt tax collector wants us to pay seven times that amount.

That is what is happening in today’s Bangladesh where ordinary law-abiding, tax-paying, and honest citizens are victimized by government agencies at every level. These rogues behave worse than the marauding borgyis and marathas, and firingyi and magh pirates of the pre-British era.

The Anti-Corruption Commission has long been made a tooth-less tiger to fight corruption or ease the pains of ordinary citizens. Worse yet, there are accusations that some of the agents may even be dishonest who are willing to overlook crimes and corruption for a negotiated price. No wonder that of the 176 countries and territories surveyed in 2016 by Transparency International, Bangladesh had a score of only 26, far below the midpoint of the scale of 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean); worse than all the south Asian countries (even neighboring Myanmar). The global average score is a paltry 43, indicating endemic corruption in Bangladesh’s public sector.

All the malaise simply saddens me. After all, the liberated Bangladesh (Bangabandhu’s dream – Sonar Bangla) was supposed to make things better for all its nationals – away from exploitation of any kind, and surely not by government or its agents. Instead, every new day is turning out to be a worse day than the day before! That is not a healthy sign for a country that wants to become a thriving democracy and economy in the 21st century.

But who will fix the problem when corruption has engulfed the entire society and people are forced to pay haram money just to survive? It is said that when the head of the fish is rotten there is nothing good in that fish! May God help us all!

President Trump: A Bull In A China Shop? – OpEd

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Presidents and Prime Ministers assuming office in mature democratic countries after an election start with a period of honeymoon with the public and the rest of the world. President Kennedy had a long honeymoon and President Hollande a briefer one. Trump has willfully chosen not to have any honeymoon by his pronouncements before the inaugural and the speech he made at the inaugural.

Hundreds of thousands of women marched against him in U.S. and other countries. More Americans marched against him than the number who attended his inauguration where he made a speech rather inappropriate for the occasion. He spoke of ‘carnage’, ‘God’s people’, and ‘righteous public’ and portrayed himself as the savior who will rectify in a jiffy all that has gone wrong with America for decades. He had no nice words for his fellow candidate Hillary Clinton who had scored almost 3 million votes more than him. His reference to the outgoing President Obama was miserly.

On day one, with unnecessary fanfare, Trump passed an executive order disabling the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obama Care, pending its repeal. This order will deprive 18 million Americans of health insurance in one year. Is this the way to make America great again?

In his first week in office Trump has managed to lose friends and make enemies at an alarming rate. The candidate Trump had abused Mexicans and declared his intention to build a wall to prevent their illegal entry into U.S. Many of us thought that as President he would not pursue such a perilous project. Instead, he has already signed an executive order to build the wall. This is ridiculous. The respectable Pew Research Centre has statistics to show that between 2009 and 2014, 870,000 Mexicans came in and 1 million went back. Net immigration from Mexico is negative. Therefore, there is no need for any wall, even assuming that it is the best way to stop or reduce illegal entry into U.S.

The candidate Trump had come out with the absurd proposition that he would make Mexico pay for the cost of the wall. Predictably, Mexico refused and now Trump says that he would impose a tariff of 20% on imports from Mexico. This is even more absurd. Trump has to get out of the NAFTA before he does that. Furthermore, the tariff will be paid by the importer who will pass it on to the consumer. In short, American consumers will pay for the wall. When the absurdity was pointed out, the new line is that the tariff is only one of the options. Can Trump take decision after due deliberation?

It is pathetically clear and it is most distressing that the Trump White House is incompetent beyond words. It cannot even get U.K. Prime Minister’s name right and spelt it as Teresa May, a soft porn artist. The same White House referred to the ‘Foreign Prime Minister of Australia’. We note that the President who unprecedently wrote ‘unpresidently’ and the staff are in perfect sync.

Since only the Congress can give money to build the wall, shouldn’t Trump have asked for money from it rather than sign an executive order? An executive order, his counselors should have told Trump, is meant for emergencies. In any case, apart from the money for construction, as there are serious diplomatic issues with Mexico won’t it have made sense to consult and get the approval of the Congress? Obviously, Trump is innocent of or wants to defy the checks and balances in the U.S.Constitution. For how long can this absurd show go on?

Trump is deeply upset that his inauguration attracted less people than the 2009 one of Obama. He found fault with the media for ‘deliberately underestimating’ the size of the crowd. He could have and should have checked with the city’s metro system according to whom the number for Trump was much less than for Obama. Funnily enough Trump’s press secretary sharply told the press that more people attended the Trump inaugural than the Obama one and then disappeared without taking questions, an outrageous example of bad manners. In his defense, Trump’s adviser Conway said that the Press Secretary was giving ‘alternative facts’, the very phrase that sums up the contempt of Trump for objective facts. The Trump team should not be imitating the Nazi Goebbels without his savoir faire. Trump has entered the ‘post-truth’ society.

Trump suffers from acute Islamophobia. As candidate he had said that he would not let Muslims in without stringent checks. He has signed an executive order suspending issue of visa to Muslims from Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Sudan, Libya, Iran, Somalia, and Yemen. While one can understand the need for strict checking before issuing visa, it is difficult to see the logic in a blanket ban. The Islamic State will get more recruits. Trump wants to reinstate torture and open secret sites outside U.S. to carry out torture.

Trump was excited about Brexit. He is allergic to trade liberalization pacts. He took U.S. out of the 12-nation TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) promoted by Obama. Trump has asked for re-negotiating NAFTA signed in 1994. Liberalized trade in the name of globalization has proved to be partly good and partly bad as the curate’s egg. Globalization needs correction, but Trump is not going about it the right way.

His philosophy of ‘America First’ and his counsel to other countries to imitate him is a sure recipe for disaster leading the world to a Hobbessian jungle with its state of nature and a war of all against all. To prevent international anarchy and to prevent states from going to war against each other, we have built up an international system based on rules and norms of behavior. Trump wants to destroy that system as for him it is all about ‘deal making’. He is wrong and should be stopped.

Trump is right in saying that NATO is ‘obsolete’. NATO was invented to keep the Soviets out of Western Europe and to keep Germany down. There is no Soviet Union and there is no risk of German re-armament and threatening its neighbors. Thanks to Jean Monnet and Robert Schuman a war between any two Western Europe states is unthinkable. When the Cold War and the Soviet Union collapsed U.S. should have taken the initiative to ask Russia to join NATO. Instead, the military-industrial complex worried that the merchants of death will get less money decided to expand NATO in a manner threatening and humiliating Russia. At the same time, when Russia resorted to aggression in Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014, NATO was unable to taken on Russia.

However, Trump should have pursued his goal with diplomatic finesse. He has upset the Europeans unnecessarily. Former Foreign Minister of Germany Joschka Fischer says  “‘America first, signals the renunciation, and possible destruction, of the US-led world order that Democratic and Republican presidents, starting with Franklin D. Roosevelt, have built up and maintained – albeit with varying degrees of success – for more than seven decades.” Ana Palacio, former Spanish Foreign Minister, says that Trump’s vision “ implies a reversion to a “nineteenth-century spheres of influence” model of world order, “with major players such as the US, Russia, China, and, yes, Germany, each dominating their respective domains within an increasingly balkanized international system.”

Prime Minister Theresa May in the joint press conference with Trump said that he had told her that he was 100 per cent with NATO. It needs some gullibility to believe that in one conversation she changed his mind on a matter of great importance. Can foreign interlocutors believe Trump if he said what she said he said?

Trump has upset China by abandoning the time honored One China policy by taking a phone call from President Tsai of Taiwan and saying that he would follow that policy only if he gets something in return. It is true that Obama had unnecessarily kowtowed to China and correction was called for. But, surely, there is a less abrasive way of doing it. Trump wants a trade war with China. The unintended consequences can cause serious damage to U.S., China, and the rest of the world.

Trump’s approach to‘re-set’ relations with Putin makes good sense as Obama in violation of the elementary principle of dealing with the incumbent had needlessly and unfairly demonized Putin who outwitted him on Ukraine and Syria. There might be a grand bargain between Trump and Putin on Syria+ Ukraine+ much more leading to the lifting of sanctions on Russia. Putin will go out of his way to get into a working relationship with U.S. Putin is nimble enough to dance with two partners, U.S. and China at the same time. China too has signaled that it will be glad to be in a G3 though its aim is to be in a G2 with U.S. with the ultimate aim of being the G1 in the fullness of time.

Trump’s style of behaving like a Chief Executive Officer is unsuited to the office he holds. In the corporate sector, the CEO listens to the managers and gives an order, though in better run companies there is a collegial approach that Trump is unfamiliar with. His inability to stop tweeting will cause serious problems. He needs to first assemble his team and then work out policies with the benefit of advice of the bureaucracy. Trump’s belief that he knows everything and that based on a news story he can tweet that he would send Federal agents to Chicago exposes his impetuosity and ignorance of how the system works.

It is important to recognize that Trump is not a Republican President. He is an outsider who came in and captured the party despite opposition from its establishment. What Trump wants to do is reasonably clear. But, what he will be permitted to do by America minus Trump and the world minus U.S. is a different matter. Applying the well- known law of the parallelogram of forces in dynamics the Trump agendas will be amended. The Republicans in the Congress are already embarrassed and soon they will have to stop their President from behaving like a bull in a china shop.

It is rather difficult for a man at 70 to change his habits, even more difficult if he is autocratic. President George Bush had the advantage that his father had arranged for Condoleezza Rice to tutor him on foreign policy. Trump did not have that advantage. But, it is not too late to get some tuition, without publicity, not only on foreign policy.

*Ambassador KP Fabian, Indian Diplomat who served in the Indian Foreign Service and he was posted to Madagascar, Austria, Iran, Sri Lanka, Canada, Finland, Qatar and Italy, and Permanent Representative to UN Organizations including FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization), WFP (World Food Programme), and IFAD (International Fund for Agricultural Development). He wrote several books recently on Middle East.

UN Agencies Hope US To Continue Tradition Of Protecting Those Fleeing Conflict

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The United Nations agencies dealing with global refugee and migration issues today expressed the hope that the United States will continue its strong leadership role and long tradition of protecting those who are fleeing conflict and persecution.

“The needs of refugees and migrants worldwide have never been greater, and the US resettlement programme is one of the most important in the world,” says a joint statement from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

The agencies note that the longstanding US policy of welcoming refugees has created a ‘win-win’ situation: it has saved the lives of some of the most vulnerable people in the world who have in turn enriched and strengthened their new societies.

“The contribution of refugees and migrants to their new homes worldwide has been overwhelmingly positive,” they add.

The statement from the agencies follows incoming President Donald Trump’s signing Friday of an Executive Order that, among things, reportedly suspends the US refugee programme for 120 days and, according to the media, bars entry of refugees from Syria, until further notice.

“Resettlement places provided by every country are vital. The UN refugee agency [and] the International Organization for Migration hope that the US will continue its strong leadership role and long tradition of protecting those who are fleeing conflict and persecution,” the agencies state, adding that they remain committed to working with the US Administration towards the goal we share to ensure safe and secure resettlement and immigration programmes.

UNHCR and the IOM go on to express the strong belief that refugees should receive equal treatment for protection and assistance, and opportunities for resettlement, regardless of their religion, nationality or race.

“We will continue to engage actively and constructively with the US Government, as we have done for decades, to protect those who need it most, and to offer our support on asylum and migration matters,” the statement concludes.

Enduring Dilemmas: Nepali Insurgency Redux – Analysis

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Though touted as acceptance of political reintegration, the Nepali Maoist move to end the 1996-2006 overt hostilities was at the time tactical rather than strategic. The party had no intention of supporting a parliamentary version of democracy and thus, for most of the 2006-2016 period, engaged in a covert effort to seize power. In this effort, it made ample use of terrorism. Ultimately, organizational, national, and regional circumstances caused the main Maoist movement to move decisively away from its covert approach. By that time, however, radical splinters had embraced the use of terrorism against rival political actors, creating a situation whereby local politics is yet a dangerous endeavor in circumstances and places.

By Thomas A. Marks, Ph.D.*

In a recent South Asia Intelligence Review (SAIR) posting, “Enduring Dilemmas,” S. Binodkumar Singh observes:

Though the insurgency has ended in Nepal, political violence continued through 2016.  However, not a single insurgency-related fatality was recorded in 2016, and this has been the case since 2013, with not a single insurgency-related fatality on record.  At the peak of insurgency, Nepal had seen 4,896 fatalities in 2002 alone, including 3,992 Maoists, 666 Security Force (SF) personnel and 238 civilians.[1]

The point of the title, as reflected in the content, is that while the Maoist quest for power has petered out (i.e., the “insurgency”), the roots of conflict not only remain but are driving a new round of challenges which place the very future of a unified Nepal at stake.  Most salient of these is the issue of the tarai (also rendered as terai; the relatively narrow flatlands bordering India), the where the Madhesi movement claims to speak for a variety of cross-cutting cleavages involving everything from communal disadvantage to geographic discrimination to gerrymandered representation not reflecting present population.

This is quite accurate as far as it goes.  But in using as its foundation a straw man of vanished insurgency, particularly one measured only in deaths (themselves a rather indeterminate category in data bases driven in large part by counts derived from English-language Kathmandu dailies), the article cedes the opportunity to discuss the continuing insurgent dreams of the Maoist splinters and the considerable violence they continue to interject at the local level in what otherwise could indeed be assessed as a much-improved post-people’s war situation.

It is this subject which I have addressed in several articles, most recently in Small Wars and Insurgencies, “Terrorism as Method in Nepali Maoist Insurgency, 1996-2016.”[2] Therein, as will be discussed below, I seek to grapple with the continued use of terrorism that falls short of lethal.  Indeed, the emphasis upon “body count” above is misplaced, since in any insurgent situation, it is not deaths that dominate the statistics but assault upon the innocent for the purposes of terrorizing. Further, innocence extends not only to individuals but to property in most formulations of definition.

Gopal Prasad Sharma, Photo Courtesy: Nepal Mountain News

Gopal Prasad Sharma, Photo Courtesy: Nepal Mountain News

To stick with innocent persons for now, the point can be illustrated by using two quite typical assaults from the period of open conflict in Nepal, 1996-2006.  As related in an article discussing an attack upon a village political activist:

Gopal Prasad Sharma, a Mahasamiti [steering committee] member and district-level leader of the Nepali Congress in Rukkum [sic], lost his eyesight after [Maoist] cadres sprinkled acid in his eyes during the insurgency.  They also tortured him by sprinkling kerosene on his body and then setting him on fire. ‘After the incident, they chased me away from my village in Kholaguan-9. They have not returned my seized land yet,’ said Sharma, who was also a VDC chairman then. He had become a target of the Maoists for being actively involved in politics as an NC leader.[3]

Similarly, as related in an article detailing an attack upon a teacher:

He is paralyzed on the left side of the body.  He cannot walk without crutches.  A scar on his head reminds him of the grim days of the Maoist insurgency.  Kiran Yogi of Dang was harassed and thrashed by the Maoists for being a ‘bourgeois’ teacher. [¶] He was eventually abducted by a group of Maoist rebels on 21 August 2003 while taking classes at Nepal Rastriya Secondary School, Bardiya. A well-wisher of Nepali Congress, he was targeted by the Maoists for refusing to become a Maoist supporter. He was taken to a field near the school. ‘I was shot in the head by the Maoists,’ he said.  He was in a coma for 23 days and did recovered [sic] later.  But doctors could not remove the bullet lodged in his head and this has left him paralyzed.[4]

That either case might easily have resulted in death for the victim should not obscure the thousands who were assaulted with the clear intention not of producing death but example.

Throughout the prosecution of their “people’s war” (an insurgency), the Nepali Maoists used a mix of violent and nonviolent actions (e.g., terrorism mixed with propaganda); of military and political actions; of local and international actions; and of direct mobilization into their political organization (through both proselytization and coercion) in coordination with more subtle co-optation of civil society. Maoist targeting took the form it did, because political mobilization by democratic government, through both direct recruitment and ensuring popular access to the mechanisms of governance, was (and remains) the greatest threat to the violent effort of the Maoists to seize power.  Democratic empowerment as realized through political parties and institutions integral to citizenship and governance (e.g., the educational and social welfare systems), together with civil society (particularly social welfare and justice organizations), are the premier challengers in efforts to mobilize the populace. Therefore, they must be co-opted or destroyed by an insurgent group.  Destruction, in the first instance, takes the form of terrorism, progressing later, as necessary, to higher forms of warfare.[5]

A voluminous body of work on this topic has accumulated since World War II. Certainly the premier treatment remains Douglas Pike, Viet Cong: The Organization and Techniques of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam,[6] which provides in considerable detail – citing insurgent documents and persons – the necessity that a new order accumulate strength by controlling the organizations and ideas through which the population goes about normal life.  This allows all activity – from schooling to medical treatment to economic activity to administration of justice to festivals to clothing – to be channeled as necessary into support of revolutionary activity.

In Nepal, as has been well documented, terrorism to ensure obedience was widespread and ubiquitous.  “Body count” was certainly important: The most iconic photo of the entire war is that of a teacher, Muktinath Adhikari, headmaster and 10th Grade instructor at Padmini Sanskrit Higher Secondary School in Lamjung District, who was murdered for a variety of reasons, to include refusing to pay the revolutionary tax demanded.[7]  Teachers, in fact, comprised an important category of victims.

Nevertheless, the goal of such action, whether lethal or not, was local control upon which could be built a revolutionary counter-state to challenge the state.  To claim this effort is no longer a factor in Nepal is to miss a development of ongoing concern.  Overt warfare has again returned to covert warfare, with deaths the exception, but terror still present.

BACK TO THE FUTURE

For the sake of clarity, it is useful to begin with a conclusion of sorts: the (present) nature of the threat.  Though Nepalis speak generically of the actions of “Maoists,” there is no longer a unified movement represented by that term but rather a fragmented spectrum that has seen until recently as many as ten parties – of which three were dominant – all claiming to be the true standard-bearers of the would-be revolution in Nepal.  In May 2016, five of the major Maoist parties and a number of radicals who had drifted away from politics again reunited to form the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre) or CPN (Maoist Centre), but this still leaves the movement divided.  For reasons that will become clear below, this has caused the situation to remain dangerous in many areas for normal political activism in support of democratic process.

For much of the 2006-2016 period, the now-mainstream Maoists of the CPN (Maoist Centre) emphasized terrorism as had been a key component of their insurgent action during the 1996-2006 period.  They did so in order to shape the political battlespace. Hence, their recent opportunistic move towards participation in the very parliamentary system they had tried so hard to destroy has produced bitter splinters determined to push back against this perceived “betrayal” in favor of continuing “the revolution” through the use of violence as dictated by strategic circumstances.  Unable or unwilling to deal with the situation, the state allows local violence to continue, particularly in obscure areas removed from vehicular access.

In such an assertion, agency surfaces as a central concern.  The danger in dealing with the situation in Nepal today is to engage in teleological strategic assessment which holds that where the mainstream Maoists are now – in power as a result of parliamentary maneuvering – is how they intended the process to work out.  Nothing could be further from the case.  Strategy called for continuing the people’s war through emphasis upon the united front line of effort enabled by terrorism.  That events played themselves out in contingent fashion resulted from dynamic structural alignments that were as unique as Nepal itself.  The present, then, was anything but calculated.  All that was certain was that violence in the form of terrorism was to continue to be a weapon of choice in the Maoist quest to rule.

Insurgency is a violent state-building project; i.e., construction of a new world, or counter-state, to challenge the existing world, normally embodied in a state or states(s).  Terrorism – the attack on the innocent by sub-state actors in pursuit of political objectives – is always one method in this project; but at times, when the violence directed at noncombatants swallows the project itself, can become a logic; i.e., “terrorism” as the term evolved, the revolutionary project of a (often primary) group structurally estranged from its purported mass or social base.[8]  The distinction between terrorism as a logic and as a method has evolved symbiotically with historical context. An unfortunate trend in the post-9/11 academic world, though, has been to conflate the originally separate bodies of discourse and study, to the extent that terrorism as an act for the establishment of local power (a profoundly political method) has more often than not been seen in the same analytical light as deeds intended for larger audiences, often national or even international.  This further causes to be obscured the operational calculation at work. Terrorism need not be lethal, merely effective.

Hence most terrorism in Nepal, whether that of 1996-2006 or 2006-2016, has not resulted in deaths but injury, surrender (in the form of joining the instigators), or flight. Flight (as realized in terrified victims) has been key to producing a source of data from which the parameters of 2006-2016 violence. [9]

This present grows organically from the past.  The now-mainstream Maoists committed unspeakable crimes both during and after the 1996-2006 decade of overt effort to seize political power.[10] This created a situation whereby violence became the common currency of political action; that is, terrorism became all but institutionalized in Nepal.  The Maoist mainstream has in the last several years sought to move beyond atrocity – in exchange for a slice of the power it was unable to seize or to gain through free elections in the very violent post-2006 context – but this has created an expected outbidding situation, whereby the principal Maoist splinters have refused to renounce violence in an effort to emerge as the legitimate standard-bearers of revolution.[11]

The epicenter of violent splinter activity has been the original Mid-Western Hills birthplace of the Maoist movement.  To the minds of the Maoist splinters still operating there, advocacy of and use of terrorism as dictated by local circumstances is the only way to continue the struggle to “revolutionize” the country and to attract the radicalized elements who feel betrayed by the mainstream Maoist party’s late embrace of democratic process. Thus the splinters engage in violence directed at the innocent, as required, both to neutralize their political activities and to force them to provide support through forced membership and revolutionary taxation (i.e., forced financial donations).

The original and still largest Maoist group is what for a majority of the period under consideration was named the Communist Party of Nepal or CPN(M), headed throughout by Pushpa Kamal Dahal aka Prachanda (“Fierce One” gained currency in international media, though “Renowned” has recently been offered as a translation). It changed its name to the Unified Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (UCPN-M) after the end of overt hostilities (1996-2006) and the beginning of covert hostilities (post-2006).  With the latest reunification, it has changed its name yet again, as noted above.

Within this larger party existed factions that were loyal to particular leaders outside the mainstream. One of these factions, headed by a dogmatic veteran of the movement, Mohan Baidya aka Kiran (“Ray of Light”), became increasingly alienated from the mainstream during the 2005-2006 period and by early 2011, minimally, was operating semi-autonomously and engaging in widespread acts of terrorism in Rukum. It finally broke away formally in late June 2012 under the original party name, the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (using CPN-M as its acronym).  It took with it many of the most violent actors relevant to the discussion herein, perhaps one-third of the entire party, and is termed here, the “radical Maoists.” In the media, it was frequently termed simply, “Baidya Maoists.”  Following its separation, its local violence included instances serious enough to require hospitalization of the victims, all political activists of rival parties.  There was no unique clothing or identifying regalia used to distinguish this or any other splinter group.

This becomes of still more moment, because an even more radical and violent splinter, led by firebrand Netra Bikram Chand aka Biplab (also rendered as Biplav; “Rebel” is often advanced as the most useful translation), broke away in November 2014 from the Baidya Maoists and designated itself as CPN(M), using the original acronym of the Maoist movement.  It took with it initially perhaps one-third of the Baidya Maoists (thus one-ninth of the original Maoist movement) and may be termed the “ultra-radicals.”

Finally, as noted above, some half a dozen other violent Maoist splinters likewise coalesced from those dissatisfied with these major factions; they also use the Maoist name but need not be discussed in-depth here.

To understand the issues which led to the split, hence to the continued use of terrorism, albeit in an often less lethal but still brutal form and scope in post-2006 Nepal, a brief overview of Maoist strategy in the past two decades is necessary.  In the first decade under consideration, February 1996 to November 2006, Nepal was buffeted by the overt effort of the original group discussed above, the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) or CPN(M), to overthrow the existing government and remake society according to the Party’s understanding of Mao Tse-tung’s concept of “new democracy.”[12]

Simplifying a complex argument, the need to struggle against a common foe – in this case, international capitalism, as realized in the likes of India and the U.S., with the Nepali state its allies and creatures – requires a united front of all except the most die-hard elements.  The requirements of establishing socialism and finally communism (e.g., confiscation of property, especially land) can be delayed in this “new democracy” until the situation allows their implementation.  In Mao’s China, this occurred some five years after the 1949 victory, most of the population having been mobilized not in the name of social revolution but of nationalism.[13] In contrast, the extreme Maoist agenda of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia implemented the national and social revolutions simultaneously, then with the 1975 victory over the Lon Nol government, declared the beginning of a radical new era: “Year Zero.”[14]

For much of the second decade under consideration, November 1996 to the present, the Maoists waged a covert struggle to achieve the same end, power. Though they ostensibly reintegrated into normal politics as a consequence of a ceasefire agreement in April 2006 and a comprehensive peace accord that went into effect in November 2006 (with numerous follow-on agreements also signed), they continued to state (publically and in their private sessions) that they were involved in an armed revolutionary struggle strategically and were only proceeding by a different path tactically (i.e., “political struggle”).  The explicit position of the party was that: (a) Democratic process was illegitimate, and majority votes did not represent the will of the people; (b) Rather, such votes represented the existing structure of power; (c) Therefore, that power structure still had to be dealt with using violence; (d) The only question was what form violence should take (a consideration which included timing); and (e) Consequently, participation in Nepal’s democratic system was a tactical gambit to further violent revolutionary options.[15]

(Press conference by the CPN-Maoist, undated)

Press conference by the CPN-Maoist, undated

As noted above, the party majority maintained this position until relatively recently. Thus it continued many of its covert, illicit activities even as its main organs moved above-ground.  It not only embraced all elements delimited, “a” through “e,” but moved aggressively to use covert violence – terrorism carried out against local political opponents as opposed to overt guerrilla warfare – to solidify its position and to win parliamentary votes. It used specially constituted forces, notably the Young Communist League (YCL), to carry out these attacks.  The Maoists were effective to the point that they were able to control elections and twice held the prime ministership, which allowed the Party to neutralize still further remaining resistance within the demoralized security forces and to expand its influence and solidify its finances.

Gradually, however, the Maoists found themselves stymied by internal opposition which was buttressed by Nepal’s giant neighbor, India (which, for geostrategic reasons, had actually assisted the Maoists at times during the 1996-2006 conflict[16]).  This led to an increasingly bitter intra-party debate as to the viability of continuing with opportunistic terrorism (as favored by the parent party) as opposed to a much more systematic use of terrorism combined with urban guerrilla warfare (as favored by the factions that ultimately splintered to form their own Maoist parties).

Outbidding occurred, in which the price of party unity was allowing the dissenting Baidya faction to adopt more aggressive use of terrorism and preparation for urban action as precursors for renewed open warfare, even as the main Dahal aka Prachanda faction had to acquiesce in violent local assaults by its own cadre lest it lose them to the more energetic opposition.  It can be seen that this was a battle over “d” above, with the dissent demanding an explicit plan for ending “e” (participation in the democratic system); for there was no disagreement on “a” through “c.”  Ultimately, these contending tendencies could not be held together, and the party split; the breakaway Baidya faction, as noted above, bolting in June 2012 from the parent Dahal aka Prachanda faction and declaring its intent to move rapidly and aggressively to assault the remnant of the state.

The practical result for politically active Nepalis was that they found themselves attacked throughout the country but particularly in areas of minimal (often ineffective in even the best of circumstances) or absent state presence. This reality intensified when similar constraints to those faced by the Dahal aka Prachanda faction also stymied the Baidya faction in its desire for outright resumption of armed hostilities.

The result was that its own radical wing, the Chand faction, as noted above, split in November 2014 and attempted once again to put in practice the desire for outright confrontation.  Since this desire did not include being suicidal, its violence also focused upon covert terrorism in outlying areas, where it could achieve small victories and begin to rebuild the revolutionary organization it felt the other Maoist factions had foolishly let wither away.[17]

In recent fieldwork interviews, I found various terms used to express this ongoing strategy; e.g., “unified rebellion” and “build people’s revolt on the foundation of people’s war.”  What these mean is what the Vietnamese called the “war of interlocking” or “all forms of struggle”; i.e., the radical and ultra-radical splinters seek to move beyond what in 1996-2006 they assess was an overwhelmingly rural-based, guerrilla mode of warfare (“people’s war”) to a mix of this with urban action (“people’s revolt”) to create “unified rebellion.”

In one sense, this is a misunderstanding by the splinters of the people’s war strategy that the unified Maoist movement waged.  Urban action was an important part of the effort.  In another sense, though, it does correctly grasp that this urban action was always tactical (e.g., assassinations) and did not support mass organizing in the cities that would support “people’s revolt.”  As concerns potential targets, the distinction hardly matters; but in the longer-term, the “people’s revolt” would be far more violent.  It was the goal of the Vietnamese communists in their now-legendary “Tet of ‘68” offensive (January-February 1968) in South Vietnam.[18]

Thus, ironically, Maoist threats and physical assault continued as a central feature throughout the period of peace, which in reality was one of covert conflict by the Maoists. From beginning to present, peace has been marred by Maoist terrorism that the state has been either unable or unwilling to control.  Statistics have not been officially tabulated by any source for reasons which speak to the profound poverty and inequity within the society, the corruption and ineffectiveness of the police, and the distracted nature of national politics.  Numbers of victims, however, for the period of peace, 2006-2016, appear to be in the thousands, most assaulted as opposed to killed.

The cumulative reality of what has happened and continues to happen in particular areas at the hands of Maoist splinters has received some attention, overwhelmingly in Nepali media.[19]  No individual details of cases are provided here except as have already been published (e.g., above).  This stems from the reality (in addition to confidentiality) that anyone with even the most tenuous identifying details will be hunted down and subjected to terroristic violence that invariably includes torture and even death.

This is one of the distinguishing characteristics of the conflict during both its overt and covert phases.  As mentioned at the offset, it successfully blurs not only war and peace but the legal and the illegal.  For the state remains more invested in process than in matters of individual justice, thus pursues what effectively is none of the cases that comprise the basis for this discussion.

HALF A LOAF

Having considered an overview of the situation, we can discuss recent events.  It is often forgotten the lengths to which the mainstream Maoists went to reduce the second constitutional assembly, or CA II, to chaos.[20]  Though there is no way of knowing, the April 2015 earthquake (with severe aftershocks in May 2015), the most severe since 1934, appears to have served as an intervening variable.  Massive damage and widespread deaths – at least 9,000 dead and more than 22,000 injured – occurred even as the “Chand faction” was aggressively using terrorism to seize land and to establish parallel governance structures in areas best designed to generate publicity.[21]  Reports indicated that it was also collecting weapons. In such context, the mainstream Maoist faction found itself forced to alter its strategic approach.

Quite apart from the factionalism already discussed, the movement had throughout its history struggled to balance the personalities and designs of its two senior figures, Dahal (a former school teacher with an MA; born 1954) and Bhattarai (also a former teacher but with a PhD; also apparently born in 1954), both well known to all analysts dealing with Nepal.  Both were active in CAII, because, though relegated to a distant minority position in the popular voting, their mainstream Maoist faction remained important, particularly as it maneuvered constantly to reunite the party factions.

The price demanded by the radicals and ultra-radicals for restored Party unity, as already noted, was a commitment by the mainstream to the aggressive use of violence to “consolidate the revolution.”  Anxious to keep this from happening, CAII leaders from the traditional majority parties gave Dahal and Bhattarai “gateway” positions (i.e., committees through which constitutional drafts flowed) in the drafting process disproportionate to the actual Maoist mainstream party count of delegates.  This facilitated the completion of the constitution-writing process and the promulgation of the new constitution on 18 September 2015 but also proved decisive in yet a further split within the mainstream.

Faced with the task of electing the first officials to govern under the new constitution, the legal Marxists of the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist), or simply UML – who were a slight second in CAII votes to the more centrist governing party, Nepali Congress – cut a deal with the Dahal faction and several other smaller parties to provide their crucial swing votes to create a UML majority.  The price was a number of key Cabinet seats for the Dahal adherents to the exclusion of Dr. Bhattarai and his followers.  As a result, Bhattarai resigned from the party to form a “New Force.”[22]  This left the Dahal faction as the official “Maoists.”[23]

Their prizes from the UML included the all-important Home Affairs Ministry, which controls the police.  The individual selected, Shakti Basnet, had been the personal secretary to Dahal during the latter’s term as prime minister. That term – and the violence-filled years leading up to it – as has been extensively discussed in media and literature – was filled with extensive use of terrorism, often of the most heinous sorts.  Once in office, Dahal used his position to neutralize the already minimal police response to Maoist depredations.  The system of justice functioned episodically.  It is difficult to conceive of a situation where Basnet was ignorant of these crimes. The position of Home Minister, to be clear, was reserved for the Maoists (as were the others) as a party as the price for their support.  Basnet was named by Dahal to be the party’s nominee, thus was appointed.

Likewise, Ganesh Man Pun, the head of the YCL, which played such a prominent role in the post-November 2006 covert violence was named by the Maoists to head the Commerce and Supplies Ministry, an ideal position, it would seem, for raising of funds for the party.  Altogether, eight ministries were allocated to the Maoists.  The apex post, though, was the reward bestowed on the former head of the Maoist armed forces (the PLA), Nanda Bahadur Pun, who was elected Vice President.  His first recorded act was to call on Mr. Dahal aka Prachanda to thank him for naming him as the party’s candidate in the pre-arranged vote.  The PLA, it goes without saying, also figures prominently in post-November 2006 terrorism, in particular through its actions staged from Shakti Khor camp.[24]

Nepal map

Nepal map

If this was the foreground, the background was violence at an altogether new post-war level.  For the constitution was a series of imperfect compromises between traditional and radical positions, with the clear loser minority populations that had been mobilized by the Maoists with the promise that benefits would flow from seizure of power.  Especially important, as well-discussed in the SAIR analysis noted above, were those populations clustered in Nepal’s traditional breadbasket, the tarai. The Maoist effort to exacerbate and then exploit the astonishing diversity of Nepali society had resulted in promises and commitments that could not possibly be honored.  There was no intention to do so.  The objective in making them was to gain power, then to deal as necessary with the backlash.[25]

In the event, as discussed above, the Maoists found themselves split by centrifugal tendencies and could not see through their strategy.  Nepali society nonetheless bore the brunt of the energized divisive forces. The result was an explosion of violence led by important societal groups that had been mobilized by the Maoists through promises of a new distribution of power that ultimately could not be recognized in the constitution.  In this violence, members of the radical and ultra-radical Maoist factions were identified and contributed to deaths among the police, as well as numerous lesser assaults upon security forces and normal members of society.  Matters were made substantially worse due to an unofficial blockade of Nepal instituted by India pursuant to its own geostrategic concerns.

From this moment, issues of “federalism” moved to the fore in Nepali political deliberations.  Put simply, how to deal with the destructive division unleashed by the Maoists even as violence had become institutionalized as a political methodology?  Hence, “enduring dilemmas.”

By the time the blockade and the protests petered out in early 2016, the UML coalition was on such shaky ground that the mainstream Maoists saw an unparalleled opportunity to regain power through advocating a “unity” government – which they would head as the distant third party holding the balance between the Nepali Congress and UML.  That the other parties would be willing to accept such an arrangement stemmed from a “perfect storm” of circumstances: (a) the willingness of the majority parties to let the Maoists try to sort out the disastrous situation they had created by strategic design; and (b) the need, at all costs, to neutralize looming transitional justice implementation.  The result was that on 3 August 2016, Dahal began his second term as prime minister.  Needless to say, he received no support from those who continued to call themselves the real Maoists and to demand that the revolution go forward.

That the main Maoist faction would settle for half a loaf, so to speak, stemmed – in the opinion of many, in which faction I find myself – from the imperative to avoid a meticulous examination of the crimes of the 1996-2006 period – which would open the door to what had been going on during the 2006-2016 period.  There was little is could do to put the genie of societal division back in the bottle; but transitional justice was a potential mortal threat to the party.

Indiscipline by the security forces in 1996-2006 had been widespread, which meant there was bound to be a major public airing of state criminal behavior that had occurred in violation of procedures and laws.  Prosecution would open up the possibility of reaching further up the state chain of command.

If this was the concern of majority state forces, the Maoists saw looming much worse.  For their criminal acts were not violations of prevailing norms but pursuant to party policy.  Even during the bitter fragmentation of the Party, therefore, the Maoist factions periodically came together at public sessions to denounce attempts by victims to pursue justice through the criminal law system. Such pursuit appeared increasingly likely as a series of Supreme Court decisions provided mechanisms to do so.[26] Gaining control of the government would place the Maoists in the position to deal definitively with the situation through perverted application of the law. This in fact proved to be the case.  Transitional justice implementation has continued to be still-born.[27]

Nothing illustrated this better than the extraordinary letter sent by the Verdict Implementation Directorate (also translated as Judgement Execution Directorate) of the Nepali Supreme Court to the police and the Home Ministry asking, in effect, why a verdict calling for the arrest of mainstream Maoist figure and former lawmaker Balkrishna Dhungel, who had been convicted or murder, had not been implemented. In a straightforward case complicated by appeals and the political implementation of Bhattarai during his turn at prime minister, the Home Ministry claimed to be unable to locate the suspect, while a police source was quoted by Republica, a leading English-language, Kathmandu-published daily, as stating that the force was waiting “for the right political time.”[28] This, of course, speaks to the heart of the matter.

Once the mainstream Maoist faction again was in power, with the attendant ability to distribute positions and resources, many of the leading “radicals” (as noted previously) returned to the fold.  Still, most “ultra-radical” leadership and much of the manpower of both “radical” and “ultra-radical” factions did not, and a burning question amongst Nepalis during my recent fieldwork was whether the violent splinters actually intended to move forward with their plans for renewed assault upon the system. Based upon my interviews with individuals at the leadership level who are presently underground, it is clear that they do.

It is the ultra-radical Chand faction which has assumed the lead in this effort.  It has retained many of its weapons from the 1996-2006 period[29] and has also obtained supplies of explosives.  It continues to drill personnel and to assault individuals as it deems necessary. Its strategy is to “build people’s revolt on the foundation of people’s war.”

This position has been widely disseminated within faction circles and even in interviews with Nepali media.  I discussed it at length with several Chand faction leadership figures during my recent fieldwork, to include most notably with a Central Committee member (i.e., a member of the upper leadership). As the latter stated flatly: “At this point in time, we need to focus our attention on the reality that we [the Party] did not say [in opting for “peace”] that the people’s war was unnecessary or wrong.  Rather, we were opting [through the united front] for people’s revolt.  If that failed, then we would continue with the people’s war.”[30]

The point was that the mainstream had betrayed the strategy that had been agreed upon beginning with the September 2005 Chunwang Plenum and subsequently several more times in hard-fought meetings of the Party’s central leadership.  What this strategy meant on the ground for numerous activists of rival political parties has been discussed previously.  Violence was to continue as the driver for the Maoist effort. As was the case during the overt 1996-2006 phase of hostilities, there is little comprehensive the state can do to counter it and provide security for ordinary citizens.[31]

CONTINUING STRUGGLE

Netra Bikram Chand aka Biplab

Netra Bikram Chand aka Biplab

In June 2016, for example, shortly before I arrived in Nepal for my latest fieldwork, the Chand group destroyed six cell-phone towers, citing alleged crimes against the people of Nepal’s major cellular firm, N-Cell. In September, shortly after I departed, a similar set of attacks by the same splinter targeted private schools within Kathmandu, again alleging crimes against the people.[32] On 6 December, four members of the same splinter were apprehended in moving a substantial lot of semiautomatic rifle ammunition and magazines.[33] Throughout this period, individuals were assaulted and threatened.

This should not surprise.  As recently as 27 December of last year, Dahal aka Prachanda could not bring himself to condemn violence.  Instead, at an event bringing together all communist parties on the birthday of Karl Marx, the once-again prime minister was reported as opining that “the fundamentals of Marxism cannot be ignored including the armed conflict as a tool to capture the state power.”[34]

In this confluence of circumstances is on display the heart of the matter: insurgency continues, albeit from a position of “back to basics.”  A large portion of the Maoist manpower has over the past several decades taken its key leaders at their words and adopted violence as an integral form of political discourse – i.e., adopted terrorism as a routine option in dealing with others with whom they disagree. So ingrained was this methodology that when the mainstream Maoists sought to introduce a more subtle use of terrorism, the most radical one-third of the Maoist movement, as highlighted previously, split so as not to be bound by what it saw as the betrayal of revolutionary ideals.

When the same mainstream Maoists decided definitively to opt for participation in the long-denounced parliamentary system – yet continued to speak of (and even encourage) violence as an option – the estranged elements returned to first principles and began the process anew of “making revolution.”  As is always the case in such a political project, terrorism is the foundational weapon, and the innocent are its victims.  They need not be murdered to suffer.

About the author:
*Dr. Thomas A. Marks, a member of the advisory board of Mantraya, is Distinguished Professor and Major General Edward Lansdale Chair of Irregular Warfighting Strategy at the College of International Security Affairs (CISA) of the National Defense University (NDU), Washington, DC. The views expressed are strictly his own. This occasional paper is published under Mantraya’s Mapping terror and Insurgent Networks project.)

Source:
This article was published by Mantraya

Notes:
[1] Refer to opening paragraph in: “Enduring Dilemmas”, South Asia Intelligence Review, vol.15, no.28, 9 January 2017,   http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/sair/Archives/sair15/15_28.htm#assessment2 (accessed 23 January 2017).

[2] Thomas A Marks, “Terrorism as Method in Nepali Maoist Insurgency, 1996–2016″, in Shanthie Mariet D’Souza (ed) Special Issue of the Small Wars and Insurgencies (Routledge) titled ‘Countering Insurgencies and Violent Extremism in South Asia’, vol. 28, no.1, February 2017, pp. 81-118.

[3] See Krishna Prasad Gautam, “Endless Pain for War Victim,” Kathmandu Post, 18 March 2012; available at:  http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/printedition/news/2012-03-17/endless-pain-for-war-victim.html (accessed 23 January 2017).

[4] Devendra Basnet and Ganesh BK, “A Conflict-era ‘Bourgeois’ Teacher Victim,” Republica, 15 August 2016, 4; available at: http://www.myrepublica.com/news/3842 (accessed 23 January 2017).

[5] To my knowledge, India has never faced an insurgent main force unit as present ultimately in Nepal and earlier in Sri Lanka. For those who have never considered the matter, this is the topic of films such as We Were Soldiers (Icon, 2002) and Hamburger Hill (RKO, 1987) – both available from Amazon – where military battalions find themselves faced by their opponent’s equivalents.  In Nepal, guerrilla action eliminated the police stations (by 2003, more than half of which had been abandoned), while regular forces organized first as battalions and then brigades (with three divisional commands of which two were active in the main force war) began to assault army formations in late 2001. A benchmark battle was the November 2002 assault by four Maoist battalions (with support elements), numbering more than 2,000, upon the independent company of some 150 at Jumla in the Mid-Western Hills.  Though repulsed, it was a harbinger of more such actions to come.

[6] Cambridge, MA: The M.I.T. Press, 1966.

[7] See “Victims Won’t Have to Wait Long for Justice: TRC Commissioner,” Republica, 16 January 2017; available at: http://www.myrepublica.com/news/13157 (accessed 23 January 2017).

[8] Terminology used throughout this contribution, particularly “insurgency” and “terrorism,” is that of longstanding in academia and the professional world.  The seminal presentation of method versus logic remains Michel Wieviorka, The Making of Terrorism (University of Chicago Press, 2004 [new preface ed.]). For my own thoughts, see “Counterinsurgency in the Age of Globalism,” The Journal of Conflict Studies 27, no. 1 (Summer 2007), 22-29; available at:   https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/JCS/article/view/5936 (accessed 24 January 2017).

[9] Of particular value in my own work has been engagement with the U.S. asylum system and support network.  Total cases in which Nepali individuals were granted asylum affirmatively in the U.S. number 3,248 for just the years 2007-2014 (the last year being apparently the most recent data).  These affirmative cases, of course, represent but an unknown segment of the pending cases in the adversarial system that is “immigration court.”  The adjective “adversarial” is operative.  Apparently ill-understood (particularly in Nepali blog commentary) is the extent to which many if not most cases are confrontational, with supporting evidence being crucial to the outcome.  Confidential court data may not be cited, but cases include some of the most hideous forms of torture I have ever encountered, to include torture-rape of rival female political activists. Descriptive detail in victim statements calls for multiplication of the numbers (e.g., “I was held prisoner with X others”). For latest U.S. Office of Immigration Statistics compilation of data see: https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/publications/ois_yb_2014.pdf (total figure used in this note computed using Nepal entry at p.45) (accessed 24 January 2017); for scathing editorial comment the hostile context of the asylum system, see “The Horror of U.S. Immigration Courts,” The Washington Post, 10 January 2017, A14; for U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) discussion, see Asylum: Variation Exists in Outcomes of Applications Across Immigration Courts and Judges (November 2016); available at:  http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-17-72 (accessed 24 January 2017).

[10] The security forces also committed crimes, but the relative accessibility of data on these has caused government crimes committed in violation of the law to often overshadow the far more numerous (especially where death did not result) Maoist atrocities carried out as a matter of policy inspired and often commissioned by ideological justification.

[11] The phenomenon of “outbidding” is integral the literature dealing with political contention.  For a succinct, relevant discussion in the context used here, see Geoff D. Porter, “Terrorist Outbidding: The In Amenas Attack,” CTC Sentinel 8, no. 5 (May 2015), 14-17; available at: https://www.ctc.usma.edu/v2/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/CTCSentinel-Vol8Issue54.pdf (accessed 23 January 2017). The topic may be further pursued in Donatella della Porta, Clandestine Political Violence (NY: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 70-112 (Chapter 3, “Competitive Escalation”).

[12] Excellent discussion of the concept may be found in Manoranjan Mohanty, The Political Philosophy of Mao Zedong, rev. ed. (Delhi: Aakar, 2012), 25-74 (Chapter 1: “Theory of New-Democratic Revolution”).

[13] See e.g. Frank Dikötter, The Tragedy of Liberation: A History of the Chinese Revolution 1945-1957 (NY: Bloomsbury, 2013).

[14] Among numerous works available, see especially Ben Kiernan, The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power, and Genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-79, 3rd ed. Ed. (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008); also Kiernan, How Pol Pot Came to Power: Colonialism, Nationalism, and Communism in Cambodia, 1930–1975; 2nd rev. ed. (New Haven, CT: Yale UP, 2004).

[15] I have dealt with this strategy in numerous works; see e.g. “Prachandagate: Critical Analysis,” Republica, 12 May 2009 (internet release 09:18:19, Tuesday; no active link found); “Will the Real Prachanda Stand Up?” The Kathmandu Post, 21 June 2009, 7; and “Will the Real Prachanda Stand Up?” South Asian Intelligence Review 7, no. 49 (15 June 2009); available at:  http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/sair/Archives/7_49.htm (accessed 24 January 2017).  Also useful is Aditya Adhikari and Pranab Kharel interview with Deepak Prakash Bhatta in “Maoist Combatants are Still Being Politically and Militarily Trained,” The Kathmandu Post, 7 September 2009; available at: http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/news/2009-09-07/maoist-combatants-are-still-being-politically-and-militarily-trained.html (accessed 24 January 2017).

[16] That democratic India should back Maoist insurgents/terrorists against a fellow South Asian democratic government should not surprise. Ensuring regional hegemony has made such cynical action a normal element of New Delhi’s foreign policy, as I have discussed in my extensive work on Sri Lanka, based upon field research in that country during its conflict. See e.g. “Sri Lanka and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam,” Ch. 14 in Robert J. Art and Louise Richardson, eds., Democracy and Counterterrorism: Lessons From the Past (Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, 2007), 483-530.   In the Nepali case, as happened with Sri Lanka, India moved back and forth between its support of the insurgents and the Nepali government. Until the very end of the conflict, the top Maoist leadership was in India.  Though informed by Kathmandu of the locations, New Delhi refused to move – except against figures (e.g., Baidya) that it assessed as standing in the way of its geopolitical objectives.

[17] This meant recreating parallel structures such as the “people’s government” declared on 25 January 2016 in Bajhang District of the Far-Western Region. See Basanta Pratap Singh, “Chand-led Maoist Announce Formation of People’s Govt in Bajhung,” Kathmandu Post, 25 January 2016; available at: http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/news/2016-01-25/chand-led-maoist-announce-formation-of-peoples-govt-in-bajhang.html (accessed 23 January 2017); reprint with better display of accompanying visuals is at: http://dazibaorojo08.blogspot.com/2016/01/nepal-chand-led-maoist-announce.html (accessed 23 January 2017).

[18] “People’s revolt” or a massive popular insurrection (rising up) has been a consistent feature of communist romanticism since Marx was impacted by the 1848 revolutionary upheaval in Europe. Even insurgents as systematic and ruthless as the Vietnamese were not immune to the seduction of the fantasy; excellent discussion available at:  http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/General_Offensive-General_Uprising (accessed 24 January 2017); see also Ngo Vinh Long, “The Tet Offensive and its Aftermath,” in Marc Jason Gilbert and William Head, eds., The Tet Offensive (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1996), 89-123.

[19] Archives of English-language Nepali media are generally available on-line but difficult to use for research purposes.  Daily compilation of “clips” has proved more practical.  For a recent personal contribution to this literature see my “’Post-Conflict’ Terrorism in Nepal,” The Journal of Counterterrorism 21, no. 1 (Spring 2015), 24-31; available at: https://issuu.com/fusteros/docs/iacsp_magazine_v21n1_issuu (accessed 24 January 2017). This article builds upon that work.

[20] For recent discussion, see Ashok Dahal, “3 Among CA Brawlers Have Become Ministers,” Republica, 18 January 2017; available at: http://www.myrepublica.com/news/13280 (accessed 23 January 2017).

[21] To my knowledge, no study has emerged dealing with the role of seized property in the ongoing violence under discussion.  That there is a considerable problem is obvious in even the most cursory examination of press coverage, but systematic tabulation and the extent of now-contested titles (occasioned by Maoist redistribution and resale of land) has not emerged. For a revolutionary take on the issue, see “Maoist Row Over Returning Property,” The Expresso Stalinist; available at: https://espressostalinist.com/category/internationalism/asia/nepal/ (accessed 24 January 2017).

[22] Bhattarai’s New Force Party, Naya Shakti Nepal, was formally launched on 12 June 2016.

[23] Given this development, there is poignancy in the evidence of past close relations between Dahal and Bhattarai that has recently emerged.  See e.g. Shreejana Shrestha, “Shadowing Prachanda: A Photographer’s Pictorial Documentation of Pushpa Kamal Dahal From revolutionary to Two-Time Prime Minister,” Nepali Times, 25 November 2016; available at: http://nepalitimes.com/article/nation/Shadowing-prachanda,3383 (accessed 24 January 2017).

[24] No study exists that explores the full range of criminal activities with which Shakti Khor became connected in order to continue the cash-flow necessary for Maoist operations.  During the period under discussion, my research has found that Shakti Khor camp was a major center for carrying out revolutionary taxation (i.e., criminal fundraising) and terror activities, to include murders committed after kidnapping and torture of the victims. Evidence implicates other Maoist regroupment camps engaged in such activity.  Cutting closer to the bone, portions of the various allowances and support funds intended for the Maoist combatants in the regroupment camps were siphoned off to the Party by the leadership.  Nepali media have placed this figure alone at NPR 3.08 billion or USD 30,800,000 (at an average 2013 exchange rate of USD 1 = NPR 100). For detailed figures used to construct total used here, see e.g. Narayan Manandhar, “Impeachment vs Appointment,” The Kathmandu Post, 25 September 2016; available at:  http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/printedition/news/2016-09-25/impeachment-vs-appointment.html (accessed 23 January 2017).

[25] “Exacerbate” is the key word in my assessment.  This is not a claim that the Maoists created the contradictions which they exploited.  These were of longstanding.  The debate, which continues to the present, revolves around the extent to which division was latent and gradually being overcome or was integral to a system, often violent, of exploitation by a hopelessly flawed state.  I do not subscribe to the latter opinion.  For excellent summary of issues see CK Lal, “Rotary of Revolutions,” Republica, 16 January 2017; available at: http://www.myrepublica.com/news/13133 (accessed 24 January 2017).

[26]  The Maoists appear to have gone to some lengths to ascertain the identity of those filing claims and then to act against them. (It must be noted that the same charge has been levelled against the security forces.)

[27] A particularly well done summary of the issue may be found in Indu Nepal, “Nepal’s Botched Truth and Reconciliation Program,” Record Nepal, 21 December 2016; available at: http://scroll.in/a/812855 (accessed 24 January 2017; Record Nepal link inactive).

[28]  For this and other extraordinary but undoubtedly accurate quotations, see Deepak Kharel, “Murder-convict Dhungel hasn’t been arrested because police don’t want it,” Republica, 6 January 2017; available at: http://www.myrepublica.com/news/12582 (accessed 24 January 2017); see also the revealing information available at Binita Dahal, “Political Protection,” apparently Nepali Times, 31 October 2011; not accessible at URL provided but on Pramb’s Weblog; available at: https://pramb.wordpress.com/2011/10/31/political-protection/ (accessed 24 January 2017).

[29] Best evidence supports a position that a substantial number of the Maoist weapons in use when the November 2006 peace accords were signed were not turned in to the United Nations inspectors.  In particular, many of the most lethal weapons vanished. Though weapons turned in were inventoried, there apparently has to date not been a comparison of those stocks with weapons lost by the security forces during the conflict, especially more advanced types, such as semi-automatic rifles.

[30] Interview, 4 September 2016; in Nepali with simultaneous translation into English.

[31] I deliberately sidestep here the issue of will, which Nepali media commentary bitingly presents as lacking in a system of governance that – as understatement would put it – “consistently disappoints.”

[32] Media identified the perpetrators as members of the Maoist Chand group (see text following), the most radical of the splinters under discussion, as did a well-informed former director of military intelligence in a personal communication, 14 October 2016.

[33] Media cited government sources in identifying the detained individuals as belonging to the Chand group.  They were in the possession of 205 5.56 rounds and 9 loaded magazines for the Indian-made INSAS semiautomatic rifle, a weapon which had been used by government during the period of overt hostilities.  A number had been lost yet not turned in during demobilization.

[34] Rather than a direct quote, the reporting used “has said.”  There is little doubt, though, that the words were uttered.  See “Fundamentals of Marxism Cannot be Ignored: Dahal,” The Kathmandu Post, 27 December 2016; available at: http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/news/2016-12-27/fundamentals-of-marxism-cannot-be-ignored-dahal.html (accessed 25 January 2017).

Notorious Political Prison Of Tsarist And Soviet Pasts Resumes Operations – OpEd

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No one familiar with the travails of the victims of tsarist and Soviet oppression will have forgotten the name of perhaps the most notorious political prison outside of Moscow, Vladimir Central, through whose cells passed thousands of prisoners on their way to exile, the GULAG and all too often death.

Among those who passed through its gates were émigré Vasily Shulgin, Ukrainian Greek Catholic leader Kliment Sheptytsky (who died there), pre-1940 Lithuanian Prime Minister Antas Merkis and his family, and even Stalin’s son Vasily, the New Chronicle of Current Events reports (ixtc.org/2017/01/vozvraschenie-vladimirskogo-polittsentrala/#more-12787).

And even after Stalin’s death, it was used as a place of confinement for political prisoners like Vladimir Bukovsky, Sergey Grigoryants, Yuly Daniel, Kronid Lyubarksy, Natan Sharansky and many others. But in 1978, all “the politicals” were transferred to the Chistopol prison; and many thought Vladimir Central’s notoriety was a matter of history.

But now as Vladimir Putin restores so many things from an evil past, the Kremlin leader has arranged for Vladimir Central to resume its role as a major political prison. Among political prisoners now confined there, the New Chronicle of Current events says, is Nikolay Karpyuk, a Ukrainian condemned to prison by a Russian court.

With Karpyuk’s incarceration there, the human rights monitoring group observes, this history “is beginning again and thus symbolizes the restoration of one of the most traditional braces [Putin’s term for what holds Russia together] of the repressive political regime.”

Strengthening Regional Cooperation To Mitigate Weather Extremes – OpEd

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This month’s floods in Thailand are a worrisome reminder of the increasing uncertainty of extreme weather events. Thailand’s flood season usually ends in November, but this year, influenced by a low depression and a strong northeast monsoon, widespread flooding in the south of the country has killed more than sixty people, affected over 330,000 households, and resulted in widespread asset losses.

Far from being an anomaly, however, the unpredictability of these extreme weather events may become the norm. Using a United Nations global methodology to estimate future disaster losses, we anticipate that average annual losses in Thailand due to floods will reach more than $2.5 billion by 2030, or 0.65 per cent of the country’s 2015 GDP, which is the equivalent of 2.6 per cent of gross fixed capital formation, and 2 per cent of gross savings.

The final impact on Thailand’s GDP for 2017 will depend on the duration of the floods. To date, the worst affected sector is rubber, which accounts for 1.5 per cent of GDP and 2.4 per cent of export revenues. The Rubber Authority of Thailand estimates that approximately 10 per cent of the country’s rubber production has been lost so far. As Thailand is the world’s largest exporter of rubber, accounting for 38 per cent of world exports, a tighter global market supply may result in an increase in prices, which would somewhat mute revenue losses. Nevertheless, based on climate outlook forecasts expecting the floods to recede by the end of January, a loss of 10 to 15 billion baht could still be expected.

Concrete measures can and must be taken to minimize the impact of these disasters:

Build the resilience of the poor to weather extremes

The El Nino climate phenomena has resulted in both prolonged drought and floods in quick succession, with poor farmers in particular, bearing the brunt. The exposure of rubber farmers in Southern Thailand to severe drought in 2015 and 2016 and the current floods signals a new normal of complex disaster risk. Poverty is a contributing factor in vulnerability to these disasters because it limits income earning options. The poor are much more likely to cope by reducing expenditures on education and health, which in turn further weakens their recovery and reinforces the transmission of intergenerational poverty in irreversible ways. Monetary values attached to disaster losses seriously underestimate the complex linkages between poverty and disasters.

Strengthen early warning systems

Last November, the 7th Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Climate Outlook Forum predicted a strong northeast monsoon, and the Thai Meteorological Department forecasted medium and short range floods, which helped line ministries and provincial governments prepare for various flood scenarios. Nevertheless, experience demonstrates that early warning messages tend to become less effective when they reach ‘the last mile’. This is not because of the lack of preparedness on the ground but rather because of the overall content of early warning messages and the way risk is communicated. Often there is a lack of communication on not only the severity of impacts, but also on what specific areas, communities, and assets are most at-risk and likely to be most affected. In other cases, communities may not receive information in time, or they may receive unreliable risk information from various media sources, including social media, which can create confusion.

To prompt action at the community-level, risk information needs to be both tailored and standardized. Calibrating these two requirements is central to maintaining the credibility of risk information. Finding the right balance can be challenging, so in recognition of this the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific’s (ESCAP) Multi-donor Trust Fund on Tsunami, Disaster and Climate Preparedness has prioritized financial support for initiatives that have built capacity in impact-based forecasting and last mile outreach.

Leverage regional cooperation to mitigate risks and build resilience

With the intensification of climate change effects, disasters are increasingly transboundary phenomena. This demands transboundary solutions. Actions taken on a regional cooperative basis can be particularly effective because the benefits unleashed are greater than the sum of individual country responses.

Consequently, ESCAP has created a climate risk communication platform, the Monsoon Forum, for improved understanding of climate outlooks and seasonal forecasts in high risk-low capacity countries such as Myanmar, Lao PDR and Cambodia. Through South-South cooperation, ESCAP will tap into Thailand’s experience and knowledge in short and medium range forecasts and early warning communication systems, while continuing to support the integration of innovative tools and techniques for forecasting and monitoring tropical cyclones through the Panel on Tropical Cyclones and the Typhoon Committee, in partnership with the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). In partnership with the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk (UNISDR) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), ESCAP coordinates UN intervention at all stages of the disaster cycle, while in parallel, ASEAN and the UN have adopted a Joint Strategic Plan of Action on Disaster Management. These multiple initiatives have undoubtedly helped countries to be better prepared to face disasters.

ESCAP will further analyse all these issues in depth in the 2017 edition of the Asia-Pacific Disaster Report to be launched in October. The report will explore viable and effective methods of building the poor’s resilience to disasters, which is key to achieving the 2030 Agenda’s aspiration of leaving no-one behind in Asia and the Pacific.

*The author is a United Nations Under-Secretary-General and the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.


Soros Funding PR Effort And Protests To Stop Trump’s Refugee Ban – OpEd

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The flurry of anguished news stories and protests surrounding President Trump’s executive action temporarily suspending “immigrants and non-immigrants” from “countries of particular concern” appears to be part of a coordinated PR effort financed by left-wing billionaire George Soros.

Rather than a complete “Muslim ban” as promised during the campaign, Trump’s executive order contains moderate refugee restrictions, similar to those that have been implemented by President Obama. If reports are true that restrictions are being applied even to green-card holders, that is an unfortunate misapplication of the law that will likely soon be corrected.

Protesters quickly materialized Saturday at JFK Airport, where some refugees were being temporarily detained.

According to Breitbart’s Aaron Klein, the signatories to the lawsuit filed Saturday to block Trump’s executive order included immigration lawyers from groups financed by Soros.

At least one case quickly prompted a legal challenge as lawyers representing two Iraqi refugees held at Kennedy International Airport in New York filed a motion early Saturday seeking to have their clients released. They also filed a motion for class certification, in an effort to represent all refugees and other immigrants who they said were being unlawfully detained at ports of entry.

The suit was filed by lawyers from the International Refugee Assistance Project, the National Immigration Law Center, the Jerome N. Frank Legal Services Organization at Yale Law School, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), and the International Refugee Assistance Project (formerly Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project) at the Urban Justice Center.

The ACLU is massively funded by Soros’s Open Society Foundations, including with a $50 million grant in 2014.

The National Immigration Law Center has received numerous Open Society grants earmarked for general support.

The Urban Justice Center is also the recipient of an Open Society grant.

Taryn Higashi, executive director of the Center’s International Refugee Assistance Project, which is listed on the Trump lawsuit, currently serves on the Advisory Board of the International Migration Initiative of Soros’s Open Society Foundations.

Reportedly, open-borders advocate Soros has provided some $76 million for immigrant issues over the past decade, as Soros-funded “immigrant rights groups” helped influence President Obama’s immigration policy.

Wyoming Senate And House To Open With Hindu Mantras

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Both Wyoming’s Senate and House of Representatives in Cheyenne will start their day with ancient Hindu prayers on February third.

These invocations will contain verses from Rig-Veda; the oldest existing scripture of the mankind still in common use.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed will deliver these prayers from Sanskrit scriptures before the Senate and House. After Sanskrit delivery, he then will read the English translation of the prayers. Sanskrit is considered a sacred language in Hinduism and root language of Indo-European languages.

Zed, who is the President of Universal Society of Hinduism, besides Rig-Veda, will also recite from Upanishads and Bhagavad-Gita (Song of the Lord), both ancient Hindu scriptures. He plans to start and end the prayer with “Om”, the mystical syllable containing the universe, which in Hinduism is used to introduce and conclude religious work.

Reciting from Brahadaranyakopanishad, Rajan Zed plans to say “Asato ma sad gamaya, tamaso ma jyotir gamaya, mrtyor mamrtam gamaya”, which he will then interpret as “Lead us from the unreal to the Real, Lead us from darkness to Light, Lead us from death to immortality.” Reading from Bhagavad-Gita, he proposes to urge the legislators to keep the welfare of others always in mind.

Zed is a global Hindu and interfaith leader. Bestowed with World Interfaith Leader Award; Zed is Senior Fellow and Religious Advisor to Foundation for Religious Diplomacy, on the Advisory Board of The Interfaith Peace Project, Spiritual Advisor to National Association of Interchurch & Interfaith Families, etc. He was invited by President of European Parliament in Brussels (Belgium) for a meeting to promote interfaith dialogue. He also leads a weekly interfaith panel “Faith Forum” in a Gannett publication for the last nearly six years.

There are about three million Hindus in USA.

China: Rebel Villagers Jailed Without Chance To Appeal

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Authorities in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong have sent nine residents of a rebel village to prison to begin serving sentences ranging from two to 10 years for their involvement in resistance to an armed police raid, without giving them a chance to appeal.

The nine from the village of Wukan were sentenced by the Haifeng County People’s Court on Dec. 26 for their part in resisting a raid that put an end to months of daily mass protests following the loss of village land and the jailing of its former leader Lin Zuluan, Radio Free Asia reported.

They were found guilty of charges that included “unlawful assembly,” “disrupting public order,” “disrupting traffic,” “obstructing official business,” and “intentionally spreading false information.”

Hundreds of armed police in full riot gear raided the village on Sept. 13 and broke up the demonstrations, firing rubber bullets and tear gas into the crowd, which barricaded the streets and fought back with bricks.

“Officials have blocked communication channels from and into the village, and retaliated against those who have shared information about the police activity,” said the Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) network, a coalition of Chinese and international human rights nongovernmental organizations, in a statement on its website.

U.S.-based Zhuang Liehong, whose father Zhuang Songkun received a three-year jail term, said the nine have now been sent to prison from where they were being held in police-run detention centers, without the chance to appeal.

Yemen: US Says 14 Al Qaeda Terrorists Killed

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An estimated 14 al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula terrorists were killed yesterday during a raid by U.S. forces in Yemen, according to a U.S. Central Command news release.

One U.S. service member died of wounds suffered in the raid, and three others were wounded, the release said.

The names of the deceased and wounded service members are being withheld pending notification of next-of-kin, the release said.

“In a successful raid against al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula headquarters, brave U.S. forces were instrumental in killing an estimated 14 AQAP members and capturing important intelligence that will assist the U.S. in preventing terrorism against its citizens and people around the world,” President Donald J. Trump said in a statement.

Trump added, “Americans are saddened this morning with news that a life of a heroic service member has been taken in our fight against the evil of radical Islamic terrorism. The sacrifices made by the men and women of our armed forces, and the families they leave behind, are the backbone of the liberty we hold so dear as Americans, united in our pursuit of a safer nation and a freer world. My deepest thoughts and humblest prayers are with the family of this fallen service member. I also pray for a quick and complete recovery for the brave service members who sustained injuries.”

“We are deeply saddened by the loss of one of our elite service members,” Army Gen. Joseph L. Votel, Centcom’s commander, said in the Centcom release. “The sacrifices are very profound in our fight against terrorists who threaten innocent peoples across the globe.”

A U.S. military aircraft assisting in the operation experienced a hard landing at a nearby location, resulting in an additional U.S. injury, according to the Centcom release. That aircraft was unable to fly after the landing. The aircraft was then intentionally destroyed in place.

The raid is one in a series of aggressive moves against terrorist planners in Yemen and worldwide, according to the Centcom release. Similar operations have produced intelligence on al-Qaida logistics, recruiting and financing efforts.

Morocco’s Return To AU Will Boost Pan African Organization – OpEd

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After leaving the pan African organisation three decades ago, Morocco is set to rejoin the African Union during its 28th African summit scheduled for January 30-31 in Addis Ababa.

It is worth noting that the Kingdom of Morocco withdrew from the then Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in 1984 over the admission of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic as a full member of the African institution.

Morocco has since then refused to be part of the organisation, but recently it changed its policy, making the re-admission to the AU on the top of its agenda.

Rabat first announced its intention to return to the club in July, with King Mohammed VI saying his country wanted to “take up its natural place within its institutional family.”

“Through this historic act and return, Morocco wants to work within the AU to transcend divisions,” he added.

In his address to the African Union in July 2016, King Mohammed urged the bloc to reconsider its position on the “phantom state” of Western Sahara, saying that a political solution was being worked on under the auspices of the UN.

“The recognition of a pseudo state is hard for the Moroccan people to accept,” he said.

The SADR is not a member of the UN or the Arab League, the King went on to note, adding that “at least 34 countries” do not recognise it.

“On the Sahara issue, institutional Africa can no longer bear the burden of a historical error and a cumbersome legacy,” the monarch said.

“It is with no small measure of emotion that I am addressing our great, lofty African family today. The Moroccan monarch stressed the fact that his nation’s decision to return to the AU did not mean it was changing its stance on Western Sahara.

Even the Pan-African parliament is awaiting the return of Morocco to the African Union (AU) family, said Speaker of the Pan-African parliament Roger Nkodo Dang who hailed the Kingdom’s decision to return to the Union.

Morocco will continue to be present in Africa and reinforce south-south cooperation to contribute to the development of the African continent and collaborate with American and European allies to bring peace and stability to this continent.

Committed defender of African integration, Morocco is an regional economic and financial hub, a hotspot for international investment in Africa. But South-South dialogue isn’t enough in itself. African development can only prosper with a triangular co-operation model, North-South-South.

“For a long time our friends have been asking us to return to them, so that Morocco can take up its natural place within its institutional family. The moment has now come,” the monarch said in a message sent to an AU 27th summit held taking in Kigali.

“Through this historic act and return, Morocco wants to work within the AU to transcend divisions,” he added.

“Mine is a country whose commitment to just causes needs no further proof. Indeed, my country has been and always will be guided by an unshakable faith in Africa, in a Continent which derives its strength from its economic riches and potential, which is proud of its cultural and spiritual heritage, and which confidently looks to the future.”

“Morocco is an African nation and it always will be. And all of us, Moroccans, shall remain at the service of Africa. We shall be at the forefront of actions to preserve the dignity of African citizens and ensure respect for our Continent. “These were the words of His Majesty King Hassan II, in his Message to the Twentieth OAU Summit on 12 November 1984, announcing Morocco’s withdrawal.

Those words pronounced by His late Majesty proved prophetic, and the conclusion today is obvious: Morocco has kept its promise.

Three decades later, Africa has never been so much at the heart of Morocco’s foreign policy and its international action as it is today.

Morocco has forged a unique, authentic and tangible South-South cooperation model which has made it possible not only to consolidate cooperation in the traditional areas of training and technical assistance, but also to engage in new, strategic sectors such as food security and infrastructure development.”

Morocco is already the second largest investor in the Continent, added the Sovereign, recalling the important involvement of Moroccan operators and their strong engagement in the areas of banking, insurance, air transport, telecommunications, housing. Morocco is also seeking to develop a strategy for tripartite cooperation channel aid funds made available in the framework of international programs for the financing of infrastructure projects or socio-economic development in African countries and to entrust those projects to Moroccan companies (consultancies, engineering companies, service providers, etc).

Morocco attaches great importance to national education by providing college scholarships to African students. More than 10,000 students pursue their studies each year in universities and schools through scholarships provided by the Moroccan Agency for International Cooperation (AMCI).

Morocco has initiated many African countries to triangular cooperation, rich and varied, based on a true partnership and effective solidarity, in addition to cooperation programs implemented bilaterally. It has many advantages and allows many African countries to benefit from the know-how and expertise already experienced in the land of Africa and to overcome the lack of budgetary resources.

Given the multiple benefits of triangular cooperation, Morocco considers that this type of partnership can be a vehicle for supporting the efforts of developing countries in sub-Saharan Africa and expresses its readiness to invest with donors and regional donors and international collaboration seeking to achieve tripartite programs for countries in SSA.

Export Morocco spares no effort to promote exchanges between Morocco and many African countries, through participation in international fairs and exhibitions, and the organization of business missions, advising businesses, hosting meetings with economic operators, and finally by sponsoring prospective studies of areas and countries.

Morocco will continue to be present in Africa and reinforce south-south cooperation to contribute to the development of the African continent and collaborate with American and European allies to bring peace and stability to this continent.

Committed defender of African integration, Morocco is an regional economic and financial hub, a hotspot for international investment in Africa. But South-South dialogue isn’t enough in itself. African development can only prosper with a triangular co-operation model, North-South-South.

Morocco is strengthening its political, economic and spiritual presence in Africa. This royal vision will certainly contribute efficiently to a stable and prosperous africa that will become more and more economically attractive to foreign investors.

Morocco’ s political influence is growing and so is the trust of the states it is working with. The kingdom keeps defending African’s cause, either directly, thanks to its participation in different operations to maintain peace or either indirectly, supporting, in all of the international summits, sustained efforts for human and social development in the sub-Saharan area.

Morocco also relies on its spiritual diplomacy. King Mohammed VI in his capacity as Commander of the Faithful, agreed to official requests made by African countries to benefit from religious training and cooperation.

Morocco has taken an engagement not just on security issues in Africa, but on environmental issues, economic issues, social issues and education issues. Now it’s high time for Morocco to rejoin the African Union.

“I am doing so as the grandson of His Majesty King Mohammed V, who was one of the emblematic figures of the development of Pan-African consciousness as well as one of the most committed architects of the historic 1961 Casablanca Conference – alongside Presidents Jamal Abdel Nasser, Ferhat Abbes, Modibo Keita, Sekou Toure and Kwame N’Kruma – a conference which heralded the advent of an emancipated Africa and which paved the way for African integration.” The Moroccan Monarch said. “I am also addressing you as the son of His Majesty King Hassan II, who, that same year, convened the Conference of Nationalist Organizations of Portuguese Colonies, who patiently contributed to ensuring stability in many regions of our Continent and who strengthened the bonds of brotherhood and friendship with many African countries.”

Certainly Morocco’s highly expected return to the African Union will boost the pan African organization and will contribute effectively along with all other members to empower the organization economically and politically and thus will serve the key interests of the African continent on all levels.

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