Sri Lanka opposes UN screening of critical film


Sri Lankan diplomats are working to block a British-made documentary about the Asian country’s civil war from being shown on the sidelines of a United Nations human rights meeting this week, arguing that it is part of a concerted campaign by the defeated Tamil Tiger rebels to destabilize the peace.

In a letter obtained Monday by The Associated Press the island nation’s ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva said the film contained a narrative that was “discredited, uncorroborated and unsubstantiated.”

The letter sent Sunday by Sri Lankan ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha to the head of the U.N. Human Rights Council, warns that the global body could be violating its own rules if the film is screened March 1 in Geneva at a meeting hosted by rights groups.

The 90-minute documentary, titled “No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka,” alleges government troops and Tamil Tiber rebels engaged in war crimes during the final stages of the conflict in 2009.

The film shows interviews with eyewitnesses and original footage of alleged atrocities against civilians including summary execution, sexual violence and torture. Its backers include the non-profit Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and Britain’s Channel 4 television, which aired two previous documentaries on the Sri Lanka’s civil war.

“The timing and the venue of this screening clearly demonstrates that it is aimed at influencing the debate in the council on Sri Lanka,” Aryasinha said in the letter, citing the two previous films that were also shown during meetings of the Geneva-based rights body.

He said the film contained “morphed and diabolical” material aimed at undermining the process of reconciliation between Tamils and the nation’s ethnic Sinhalese majority.

The film’s director Callum Macrae acknowledged that the documentary’s release had been timed to coincide with one of the council’s three regular annual meetings, but denied that it distorted the facts.

“We believe that our film contains very important evidence about the terrible events in the last few months of this war and we believe we have a duty to make that evidence available to the diplomats and country missions at the U.N. Human Rights Council who must make important decisions about how to ensure accountability and justice in Sri Lanka,” Macrae said.

Earlier this month the U.N.’s top human rights official faulted Sri Lanka for failing to properly investigate reports of atrocities during the war and said government opponents continue to be killed and abducted.

The United States has said it will introduce a resolution at the meeting urging a full accounting of what happened at the end of the war. A U.N. report says tens of thousands of civilians were killed in the final five months of the fighting.

By FRANK JORDANS
Associated Press

Teen logic: Just do it and move on


Are you a 30-year-old virgin who has never been canoodled, never been kissed, never been asked out or, let’s cut to the chase, never been in the thick of real action? Beyond an iota of doubt, you belong firmly to the past. So move on and get a life. It is never too late.

The 2012 TSI-ICMR sex survey reveals that an overwhelming majority of India’s sexually-active urban teenagers – 90 per cent – lost their virginity well before they stepped into their 20s. Clearly, teenagers in India, a country that is experiencing a major ‘youth bulge’ in its population, are today discovering the pleasures of the flesh at a much earlier age than their parents did. Free mixing with members of the opposite sex, a general loosening of parental pressures, access to adult entertainment on the internet and elsewhere, and a gradual easing of age-old social taboos have set them free in a way that would have been nearly unthinkable just a couple of decades ago.

 
But have we not been aware of the changing sexual behaviour and practices of youngsters in this vast country for quite a while now? The TSI-ICMR survey only reinforces what we already know: Indians in the age band of 15 years to 24 years, the range that the United Nations recognises as “youth”, are making the most of the new climate of freedom that exists in the country.

As many as 65 per cent of the respondents believe that the minimum age for having consensual sex should be either 18 years or more, underscoring the latent fact that while Indian youngsters are not averse to going the whole hog with their boyfriends or girlfriends whenever and wherever the opportunity presents itself, a conservative inner core probably prevents them from confessing that one’s age is only a number while sex is a basic need that can wait for absolutely nothing. Coitus interruptus is out of the question when the urge bubbles to the surface.

  
This survey also establishes that high school and college students in India’s metropolitan areas, despite their raging desires, are probably not as sexually active as they would want to be. A total of 60 per cent of those surveyed said that they have sex only once a month or after intervals that last even longer.

But no matter what the frequency of the act is, it would seem that urban Indian teens are overwhelmingly in favour of playing fair and square with their sex partners. Only 27 per cent of the respondents admitted that they have had more than one sexual partner simultaneously, while 83 per cent of them asserted that love was either “very important” or “somewhat important” in sustaining a long-term sexual relationship.

One crucial question: how aware are these teens of the consequences of their acts? Here, too, they do not seem to score all that badly. Just 27 per cent say they do not use any contraception while having sex. The fact that the remaining 73 per cent use either condoms or contraceptive pills as a precautionary measure points to a level of responsibility and awareness that is commendable.

   

Moreover, nearly half of these young sexual partners get condoms across the counter at a chemist’s shop, suggesting a level of confidence that belies their tender age.

As the sexual revolution takes roots and spreads out in a diverse land where many social and economic fissures are a part of everyday reality, are we as a society prepared to handle the fallout?

As one of the reports on the following pages points out, the phenomenon of teen pregnancies is acquiring worrying proportions in India, putting girls in particular under severe physical and psychological strain. 

As gynaecologists and counsellors grapple with the problem, India’s sex education module has been coming increasingly under the scanner. How well informed and prepared are teenagers to handle an untimely pregnancy when neither their parents nor their teachers are equipped enough to keep pace with the delirious, if troubled, sexual awakenings of the wards in their charge?

More often than not, young lovers in this country are left to fend for themselves when problems erupt. It might come as a relief that 77 per cent of India’s sexually active urban teens have said that they have never had to face an unwanted pregnancy. But the fate of the 23 per cent that have had to contend with the ramifications of going too far cannot be wished away.

What is worrying is that only 4 per cent of such couples have actually gone on to get married, while 12 per cent went in for an abortion and 7 per cent broke up.

Asked what they would do if the girl ever got pregnant in the course of a torrid affair, only 6 per cent of the respondents said that they would enter into wedlock. As many as 85 per cent would take recourse to the easy way out – an abortion. Only 1 per cent said they would dare to bring a love child into the world.

But this really is not about defiance and rebellion. In a country in which well over 30 per cent of the population is aged between 15 and 24 years, parents and guardians have a huge role to play in rectifying any distortions that might occur
as teenagers grope around for the right way forward in fulfilling their sexual needs. Unfortunately, 71 per cent teenagers in the Indian metros do not discuss sex-related issues with their parents or other members of the family. Only 9 per cent “regularly discuss” such issues at home. Alarming!

Is that the reason why cases of teen pregnancy, crimes of passion involving teenagers, date rapes and a panoply of misconceptions about the sexual act and its place in our lives are on the rise? While there can be no easy answers to such complex questions, read on as we attempt to get as close to the heart of the matter as possible…

Malala’s hope [ sign the petition ]


Malala has dedicated her childhood to championing education for girls like her in Pakistan. As she lies in a hospital bed, a tragic victim of Taliban gunmen, let’s help make her dream come true.

One part of Pakistan has already started a successful programme of paying families which send their girls to school regularly. But in Malala’s province the government is dragging its feet. Senior politicians have offered Malala help, and if we act now we can get them to commit to rolling this out nationwide.

Before the media spotlight moves on, let’s raise our voices to demand that the government announces funding for all Pakistani girls who attend school. In days the UN Education Envoy will meet Pakistan’s President Zardari and he says hand delivering 1 million signatures will strengthen his case.

To Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, PM Raja Pervez Ashraf and KP Province Governor Syed Masood Kausar:

We call on Pakistan to agree to a plan to deliver education for every child through building schools, training teachers and funding families whose daughters regularly attend school. All governments and international organisations must play their part to ensure that the millions of children who are currently out of school, get an education.

Sign now, and let’s help make Malala’s dream come true.

http://www.avaaz.org/en/malalahopenew/?cQWCUbb

Source : Avaaz.Org

Taliban cut nursing woman’s breast – Sheer Arrogance


Pakistani Taliban fighters cut the breasts of a woman who was breastfeeding her child and asked other women to eat the pieces, in a gory incident highlighted in a report on the abuse of women in the militancy-hit tribal belt bordering Afghanistan.

The incident occurred when five militants walked into a house and saw the woman breastfeeding her child, The Express Tribune quoted the report titled ‘Impact of crisis on women and girls in FATA’ as saying.

The report, released by the human rights organization “Khwendo Kor” (Sisters’ Home in Pashto) with financial support from the UN, is based on case studies of women from the tribal belt living in camps set up in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa for people displaced by militancy.

Women in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas are more susceptible to abuse in a post-conflict scenario, whether or not they are part of the conflict, the report says. Another revelation is that women in camps were forced to have sex in exchange for food and non-food items. Girls and widows were at greater risk of such abuse.

“A security officer forced me to have sex in exchange for cooking oil and pulses when I was collecting food at the main entrance of the camp,” a 22-year-old woman in Jalozai camp is quoted as saying.

The surveys conducted at relief camps at Nahqai and Jalozai showed that women were uncomfortable going to toilets because men constantly lurked around.

The report said there was also an increase in “honour killings” in which women who were raped were murdered because rape was considered a disgrace to the family.

Forced marriages, honour killings, exchange of women between tribes and marriages with first cousins resulting in disabilities among offspring have made women very dependent, the report said.

Source : Indian Express

World Population to Hit 7 Billion in Five Days: UN


The world’s population will reach 7 billion in five days, the UN has said as it urged the global community to seize the opportunity and invest in health and education of its youth. Actions taken now will decide whether the future will be healthy, sustainable and prosperous or marked by
inequalities, environmental decline and economic setbacks, a United Nations report has said.

World Population to Hit 7 Billion in Five Days: UN

“The world must seize the opportunity to invest in the health and education of its youth to reap the full benefits of future economic development or else face a continuation of the sorry state of disparities in which hundreds of millions of people in developing nations lack the most basic ingredients for a decent life,” UN Population Fund (UNFPA) Executive Director Babatunde Osotimehin said.

He said that planning and the right investments in people will empower them to make choices that are not only good for themselves, but also for a world of 7 billion.

The UNFPA report ‘The State of World Population 2011′ notes that the record population size can be viewed in many ways as a success for humanity because it means people are living longer and more children are surviving worldwide. But not everyone has benefited from this achievement or the higher quality of life that this implies, it added.

Great disparities exist among and within countries and in rights and opportunities between men and women as evidenced by the fact that 215 million women of child-bearing age in developing countries lack access to voluntary family planning, while millions of adolescent girls and boys there have little access to sex education and information on how to prevent pregnancies or protect themselves from HIV.

“Our work is far from done,” Osotimehin said. “We must tear down economic, legal and social barriers, to put women and men and boys and girls on an equal footing in all spheres of life.”

Of the world’s 7 billion, 1.8 billion are young people between the ages of 10 and 24, he noted. “Young people hold the key to the future, with the potential to transform the global political landscape and to propel economies through their creativity and capacities for innovation.

Osotimehin said that the investment in the health and education of our youth would yield enormous returns in economic growth and development for generations to come.