Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, August 25, 2013

SL State divides communities in East: Batticaloa MP

TamilNet[TamilNet, Friday, 23 August 2013, 19:29 GMT]
The Sri Lankan government is doing the opposite to what it wants portrayed to the outside world with the beautiful term ‘reconciliation’, declared Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian from Batticaloa, Mr P. Selvarasa, Friday, at the agricultural development meeting held at the Batticaloa District Secretariat. Allowing the SL State officials to collaborate with the Buddhist prelate of Mangalarama vihara while there is a court order against the illegal settlement in Paddip-pazhai division and literally banning the Tamils at Navakkiri in Vellaa-ve’li division from accessing their tank to engage in their livelihood of fresh water fishing, is nothing else than setting one community against the other, he said citing the latest reports. 

The Tamil people, who have been dependent upon fresh water fishing in Navakkiri tank are now fully denied access to the tank following the encroachment by Sinhalese from Ampaa’rai district. 

Despite the repeated efforts by the Tamil fishermen in urging the authorities to provide them access to the Navakkiri tank, their demands remain systematically neglected till this date, he said. The fishermen are organised in a fishing society, but their voices remain unheard. These Tamil fishermen should be provided access to their tank if the SL State is serious about ‘reconciliation’ the TNA parliamentarian from Batticaloa said.

Likewise, all the illegal settlements in Paddippazhai should be abandoned in compliance with the court order, he said. 

More than 15 permanent houses have been put up already and 21 more houses are to be constructed for the encroachers from elsewhere while the people of Kevu’liyaa-madu are denied to access the public lands allocated for grazing their livestock. 

These settlements should be scrapped and access to grazing lands should be restored, the parliamentarian further demanded, adding that the GA should act without further delay.

Bloody Footprints On Sri Lanka, The Island Of Shame

By Nicola Smith -August 26, 2013 
Nicola Smith
Colombo TelegraphRavishan should have been preparing to enter university. Instead, on the day he was to sit his entrance exam, the 19-year-old was buried in his school uniform.
He was shot in the head on August 1 as Sri Lankan forces opened fire on a peaceful environmental protest in Weliweriya, a small town close to the capital, Colombo. The town, which donated blood to the army during Sri Lanka’s 26-year civil war, is in shock.
The bloody episode is cited as the latest example of violent repression that threatens to overshadow the Commonwealth leaders’ summit in Colombo in November.
Read more in the Sunday Times UK