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Sri Lanka sugar mill blockaded, director assaulted ahead of expropriation

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Nov 05, 2011 (LBO) - A sugar mill in Sri Lanka slated for expropriation has been blockaded by ruling party activists and there was no police protection its owner said, raising fresh questions about liberty, rule of law and justice for the island's citizens.

"As of now our factory is blockaded, a director was assaulted yesterday," Daya Gamage, head of Daya group which owns Sewanagala Sugar, a factory in the East of Sri Lanka, told reporters in Colombo, Friday.

"Two vehicles have been damaged."

Sewanagala Sugar is one of three dozen firms slated for expropriation in a secretly hatched law which is being rushed to parliament by the administration of President Mahinda Rajapaksa which commands a two third majority in parliament.

The draft law said 'underutilized' assets and under-performing assets of 37 enterprises would be expropriated and anyone who resisted would be jailed for 10 years after a summary trial.

Venezuela Style

Gamage said he believed Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapaksa had been misinformed that assets were underutilized.

"He had been misled and the cabinet of ministers had been misled," Gamage said.

"That person has to be found. And this bill must be withdrawn."

Gamage's words echoed a statement from Agroislna, a Venezuelan agriculture supply firm that was listed for expropriation by President Hugo Chavez, last year.

"[T]he only explanation that occurs to us right now is that the president ... hasn’t been sufficiently well informed," Agroislena said in October 2010.

At the time Chavez said he planned to seize more farmland deemed 'under-used' for distribution.

Harsha de Silva, a lawmaker representing Sri Lanka's opposition has labelled the expropriations as being Zimbabwe style, where large commercial farms owned by white skinned settlers were distributed to black skinned citizens.

But Gamage said his factory only had 469 hectares, and most of its supplies already came from thousands of small contract growers who had been given land by the state.

State-backed settlements in the East of Sri Lanka involving mostly majority Sinhalese had been factor in Sri Lanka's three decades war which ended two years ago.

Gamage had bought the Sugar firm from the state in 2001 paying 550 million rupees when it was making a loss of 140 million a year and invested more than two billion over the last several years.

Small Farmers

Gamage said he wrote of a part of the credit for small growers, stopped using furnace oil and fired the plant from sugar cane waster and modernized it investing about two billion rupees over the last several years.

Last year it made a profit of 220 million rupees and dividends had been paid to factory workers who owned 10 percent of the stock in the firm, he said. It had revenues of 1.1 billion rupees.

If he had not bought the factory the Treasury would have had to pay several hundreds of millions of rupees to maintain the factory, he said.

Justin Jayasekera, a contract grower who flanked Gamage at a media conference told reporters he now got a cash advance two days after he sold cane to the factory and full settlement was made in week compared to a month under state management.

Gamage said money was credited to accounts at micro-finance firm Bimputh Finance, now a listed company.

"When I bought the factory I went to many banks but no one was willing to give credit to cane farmers to re-start cultivation," Gamage said. "So I borrowed money from banks, on my credit, started a micro-finance company and loaned money to the farmers."

Domino Effect

He said since the expropriation law was announced some depositors had withdrawn their deposits. Banks were demanding additional guarantees even pass documents at his export businesses, he said.

"The government does not realize the magnitude of the problem," he said. "Foreigners will not come. Local investors will leave the country. Who will come forward to invest?"

The Rajapaksa administration has been pushing for 8.0 percent growth and over a billion dollars of foreign direct investments.

Sri Lanka has had a history of violating property rights of both foreigners and its own citizens. It killed flowering domestic businesses after independence from British rule by expropriation. But later the state gave a constitutional guarantee specially mentioning foreign investors and even tax breaks.

The constitutional guarantee came after unemployment topped more than 20 percent in the 1970s. But the new constitution itself has come under fire for destroying an independent public service and exposing citizens to arbitrary actions of rulers.

It is unclear what determination the Supreme Court gave on the draft bill.

Rule of Law

Sri Lanka's Bar Association chief Shibly Aziz has called for the law to be withdrawn and its compliance with the constitution re-examined with citizens being given a chance to make their case, as in the case of other bills.

No one other than the state prosecutor was allowed to raise objections to the draft law Supreme Court.

Aziz said in the interests of Rule of Law and democratic values, in the future laws should not be rushed into parliament in this manner.

The factory invasion and assaults of works comes ahead of the actual passage of the bill.

Company officials said there was no help from the police which seemed to be under thumb of a ruling party strongman in the area, indicating the lack of general rule of law and liberty in the country to citizens.

"The police in fact went to court to get an order to stop the factory from trucking sugar to buyers," he said. "But we heard that the magistrate refused to grant the order."

If the expropriation bill is passed the invasions would be effectively made 'lawful'.

Sri Lanka'a administration says that foreign investors will come rushing in when 'under-utilized' assets are turned around.

"When they see that we are putting in place systems to ensure better management, they should be encouraged to come and invest here," minister Keheliya Rambukwella was quoted as saying by the AFP news agency.

 

Source: 

http://www.lankabusinessonline.com/fullstory.php?nid=2139859574

Wikileaks' Julian Assange loses extradition appeal

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Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has failed in his appeal against extradition from the UK to Sweden over allegations of rape and sexual assault.

Two judges at the High Court in London decided that a previous ruling in favour of extradition must be upheld.

Swedish authorities want him to answer accusations of raping one woman and sexually molesting and coercing another in Stockholm last year.

Mr Assange's lawyers say they will appeal at the Supreme Court.

They have 14 days to bring the case to the highest court in the land, on the grounds that it raises issues of general public importance.

However, Mr Assange's legal team will first need to seek permission from the High Court to launch the appeal.

'Accurate description'

In February, District Judge Howard Riddle ruled that Mr Assange should be extradited to face investigation following a hearing at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court.

The 40-year-old Australian denies the allegations and says they are politically motivated.

However, in their ruling the judges, the President of the Queen's Bench Division Sir John Thomas, sitting with Mr Justice Ouseley, said that the issuing of the European arrest warrant (EAW) that led to Mr Assange's arrest and all subsequent proceedings to achieve extradition was "lawful" and "proportionate".

They dismissed Mr Assange's argument that the warrant was invalid because it had been issued by a prosecutor, and not a "judicial authority".

They also said the action of the prosecutor was subject to the independent scrutiny of Swedish judges, "which, as judges of another (EU) member state, we must respect".

The judges said: "It is clear that the allegation is that he had sexual intercourse with her when she was not in a position to consent and so he could not have had any reasonable belief that she did."

The court also rejected Mr Assange's assertion that the descriptions of the offences were not a fair and accurate description of the conduct alleged against him.

They added: "This is self evidently not a case relating to a trivial offence, but to serious sexual offences.

"Assuming proportionality is a requirement, it is difficult to see what real scope there is for the [appeal] argument in circumstances where a Swedish Court of Appeal has taken the view, as part of Swedish procedure, that an arrest is necessary."

Speaking after the judgement, Mr Assange said: "I have not been charged with any crime in any country.

"Despite this, the European arrest warrant is so restrictive that it prevents UK courts from considering the facts for a case.

"We will be considering our next steps in the days ahead."

The BBC's legal correspondent Clive Coleman said Mr Assange's difficulty has always been that he was being extradited on an EAW, which is a scheme brought in after the terrorism outrages to fast-track extraditionsamongst European countries.

"The idea that underpins it is that every justice system within the scheme is as good as any other - he will get as fair a trial in Sweden as he would get here.

"That means it's very, very, difficult to resist extradition because as long as an allegation is made in relation to an extraditable offence and there's an intention to prosecute, then you pretty much have to give the person up for extradition," our correspondent said.

'Level playing field'

Wikileaks has published a mass of leaked diplomatic cables which have embarrassed several governments and international businesses.

American soldier Bradley Manning is being held in US custody for allegedly leaking information to the website.

Mr Assange appeared in court wearing a smart suit and Remembrance Day poppy but sat silently through thejudgement, said BBC News home affairs correspondent Dominic Casciani.

Upon his arrival, Mr Assange was mobbed and police redirected him away from the crowd who had fixed to the iron railings of the court banners reading "Free Assange! Free Manning! End the wars".

Speaking after the appeal hearing, his supporters outside the court said they were "outraged" by the judges' decision.

Ciaron O'Reilly, 51, said: "Assange is probably the most amazing person in recent history who's upset so many powerful people in such a short space of time so it's obviously not a level playing field."

(BBC News)

 

Source: 

http://www.srilankamirror.com/english/the-news/8414-wikileaks-julian-assange-loses-extradition-appeal

Bloomberg Recruit 5 Law Firm Partners to Their Legal Team

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Things can't be going too badly on the good ship Bloomberg  as they announced yesterday  that five partners from law firm  Willkie Farr & Gallagher will be joining the Bloomberg legal team, effective January 1, 2012.

Here's the low down via Press release


The newly constituted internal legal team will include Dick DeScherer, Dan Grossman, David Levine, Carol Mascera and Sarah Osborn from Willkie. DeScherer will become Chief Legal Officer.

“Dick DeScherer has been a vital partner to Bloomberg for several decades and we’re thrilled to welcome him as the Chief Legal Officer of the company. We are also looking forward to the addition of his talented colleagues from Willkie Farr & Gallagher and integrating them into our existing internal legal team,” said Bloomberg Chairman Peter T. Grauer.

“As a growing company operating in almost 200 locations around the world, we are finding unprecedented opportunities for growth in our customer base, our product offerings and our local partners. Bloomberg will benefit greatly from a ramp-up of both the number and range of expertise of in-house legal staff to ensure we are much more efficient and nimble as we seek to take advantage of these global opportunities” said Bloomberg CEO Daniel L. Doctoroff.


Willkie Farr & Gallagher has been Bloomberg’s primary outside legal counsel since 1987 and DeScherer has worked with the company during the same time period, serving on the Bloomberg Board of Directors for more than 25 years -- a role he will continue. Willkie Farr & Gallagher is supporting this transition and will continue as the company’s primary external law firm.


Source: http://practicesource.com/house-of-butter/6329-bloomberg-recruit-5-law-firm-partners-to-their-legal-team

Scarce funds delay court's family judgments by years

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Bruce Doyle is calling for more federal magistrates in Brisbane

SLOW judgments and under-resourcing have made the Brisbane registry of the Federal Magistrates Court the bane of Queensland's family lawyers.

Although the court has just 11 magistrates, making it one of the state's smallest, it dominates a register of complaints about overdue judgments that is held by the Queensland Law Society.

Source: CHRIS MERRITT, LEGAL AFFAIRS EDITOR | The Australian

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Raj

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The LTTE has received $ I mn from Raj Rajaratnam, founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund after it victory at Elephant Pass in April 2002. In spite of the US proscribing the LTTE in 1997, Rajaratnam had invested LTTE funds raised abroad in the hedge fund.

"… a few were aware within the Tamil community that Rajaratnam apparently had given the Tamil cause at least $1 million in recognition of the Tamil victory in 2000 over the Sri Lankan army at the strategic Elephant Pass, which controls access to Sri Lankanorthern peninsula, where ethnic Tamils are concentrated," Vanity Fair’s David Rose revealed in a web exclusive dated Sept. 30, 2011.

Captioned ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Raj’, the report exposed Rajaratnam’s LTTE links on the basis of an interview with a former FBI agent, who had infiltrated an LTTE event in Nov. 2000 at the Doubletree hotel in Somerset, New Jersey, where Rajaratnam addressed about 400 persons.

Earlier this year, Rajaratnam, was convicted of conspiracy and securities fraud in one of the biggest insider-trading cases in the history of Wall Street.

Rose alleged that many of those who funded the LTTE were eminently respectable, and worked in America, Canada, Australia, and Europe in professions such as medicine and the law. Rose quoted the FBI informant as having said Rajaratnam got up and, flanked by L.T.T.E. flags, he said, ‘Everyone must support the Tigers’ cause. Rajaratnam said his wife was an Indian Sikh [a minority group from which some had also mounted a terrorist campaign aimed at creating a separate state]. Rajaratnam said: ‘They’re terrorists. We’re terrorists. We are all freedom fighters.’ Everyone laughed. Then he added: ‘They’re our terrorists, and you all must support this struggle.’"

In May 2011, Raj Rajaratnam was convicted in New York on 14 counts of conspiracy and securities fraud in one of the biggest hedge-fund insider-trading cases in the history of Wall Street. The trial revealed how Rajaratnam developed a web of corrupt relationships and paid millions of dollars for insider tips that enabled him to beat the market time and again. But throughout the two-month hearing, prosecutors said nothing about one of the uses to which Rajaratnam allegedly put his criminally acquired fortune—funding Tamil terrorism.

The FBI informant had been to the Vanni in August 2003 during the Norwegian arranged ceasefire agreement between the then Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe’s government and the LTTE. Describing the Vanni as the fortress housing 300,000 people, Rose quoted the FBI informant as having said that Vanni had underground bunkers for advanced computers and communications equipment as well as two fully equipped subterranean hospitals. There Rudra met most of the Tamil Tigers’ senior leadership, wearing a concealed F.B.I. wire all the while.

Rajaratnam made an attempt to fund LTTE rehabilitation project a few years ago, though it never materialized.

According to the FBI informant, the F.B.I. had acquired a comprehensive picture of the group’s fund-raising capability. Raj Rajaratnam’s name came up frequently. "On the recordings, he was spoken of in a reverential way, with all the kudos he got as a financial whizz," Rose quoted an FBI official as having said. The US investigation also revealed that the LTTE had invested heavily its own funds in the Galleon fund.

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