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

Monday, January 23, 2012

When a Parliament translator is abducted -Is this how the police investigates? Shame on law enforcers!

(Lanka-e-News -23.Jan.2012, 11.30PM) Following the shocking abduction of Parliament language translator Sathyaseelan Packiaraj by the criminal white Van, the Trincomalee harbor police had conducted itself even more shockingly , by behaving most indifferently and unlawfully , according to reports reaching Lanka e news.
Believe it or not , despite the most grieved wife of Sathyaseelan arriving at the Harbor police early morning to lodge the complaint , her complaint has been recorded in the police heinous crimes register under No. 01/55 only at 11.35 forenoon. Based on police records , the team for the investigation into this had left the station only at 4.20 p.m.
When a complaint is received that a heinous crime has been committed , it is the onerous duty of the police to take immediate action , but in Sathyaseelan’s criminal abduction , the police had behaved most oddly and dilatorily on purpose apparently. Mind you , the police had initiated inquiries 11 hours later on Sathyaseelan’s abduction committed at 5.30 early morning. It is worthy of note that the victim of this abduction is not an ordinary individual , but rather he is an official Parliament translator. It is a big question mark why the police resorted to this dilatory tactic ? At this rate what is the protection a law abiding citizen has in this country if those in the highest of the State hierarchy themselves are allegedly responsible for abductions , and the law enforcing authorities are also looking the other way ?
While complaints have been made to the police on so many occasions in connection with white Van abductions , yet the police had always behaved indifferently and unlawfully without taking due action . Is it because these abductions are being made with premeditated arrangements with the police who are instructed to act accordingly , to enable the white Van to escape ?
What is most perplexing is , Sathyaseelan had been abducted in a high security zone, Trincomalee..There is a security barrier at Horawipatana and another at the old police junction to provide security to the Town. The Eastern province DIG, Ravi Vidyalankara’s office is situated in the area where this abduction was committed. That means this region is not one that is not an unsecured zone. In these circumstances, who are those responsible and capable of abducting a Parliament language translator ?
From the foregoing , the conduct of the Harbor police is most baffling and rudely shocking. For, if some VIP with the State had been abducted , and if the police had acted this way , the police would have been taken to task. But , in this instance the entire police seem to be backed and safeguarded in their dastardly behavior.
Moreover , a Sinhala constable Karunaratne No. 64678 of the crime division had taken down the complaint No. 01/55 of Sathyaseelan’s wife. This is against the law. The circular issued by the police headquarters clearly lays down that a complaint of a Tamil person shall be recorded by a Tamil police officer . Hence , while there is a Tamil, IP Suresh ,who is the crime division OIC of the Harbor police, the complaint being recorded by a Sinhala constable Karunaratne is absolutely against the law.
Hence, the Harbor police station chief OIC S C Narampanawa is duty bound to furnish answers to these grave charges , while the actual facts surrounding the abduction of Sathyaseelan shall also be revealed.

Sri Lanka’s defence secretary targets workers and youth

 

Published by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI)


By K. Ratnayake   23 January 2012
In a recent speech, Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse highlighted the “threat to our national security” posed by attempts to “create [political] instability” as in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.
Remarks by the top defence official, the brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, are an ominous warning that the government is refocusing its police-state apparatus, built up over a quarter century of civil war, against protests by workers and youth.
The defence secretary’s speech, entitled “Future challenges of national security in Sri Lanka,” was delivered in Colombo on January 11 before top military officers, state bureaucrats and others. It was widely publicised and broadcast on all private and state television stations on January 13.
Gotabhaya Rajapakse was chiefly responsible for prosecuting the government’s communal war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), along with former army commander Sarath Fonseka, who has since fallen out of favour and been imprisoned on trumped-up charges. Rajapakse is part of the military-political cabal—including the Rajapakse brothers, senior generals and state bureaucrats—that runs the government.
The timing of the speech was significant. Unrest among workers and youth is growing. In the same week, thousands of university students held demonstrations to oppose the government’s privatisation of university education. Plantation workers also held protests against the imposition of increased workloads.
On Tuesday, university teachers came out again to press for a salary increase and to show opposition to a private university bill. On Wednesday, thousands of the electricity and water board workers demonstrated in Colombo, demanding higher wages. The government is calculating how to suppress these struggles.
Rajapakse began his speech by referring once again to the “threat” of the revival of the LTTE abroad and in the country. Such comments are mandatory as the government needs to constantly stir up anti-Tamil communalism—the chief weapon used by the ruling elite for decades to divide the working class and rural poor, and block a unified struggle to defend living conditions and democratic rights.
The government restarted the war in 2006 and up until the LTTE’s defeat in May 2009 constantly exploited the “threat of terrorism” to justify the suppression of strikes, with the assistance of the trade unions.
The defence secretary warned his audience that although the LTTE had been crushed, “not to take it for granted” that it could not re-emerge. He claimed there were “on-going activities” of LTTE-linked organisations outside Sri Lanka—naming groups such as the Transitional government of Tamil Eelam, the British Tamil Forum and the Tamil Eelam People’s Assembly.
Rajapakse declared that the aim of these groups was “winning international opinion for the separatist cause, increasing international pressure on Sri Lanka in various areas, and pushing for international investigations into war crimes to undermine the efforts of the ‘democratically’ elected government.”
Pro-LTTE groups are engaged in a futile campaign to seek the support of the “international community” for a separate capitalist state of Eelam in the North and East of Sri Lanka. All the major powers, including the US, backed the war against the LTTE. They have rejected the formation of a separate Eelam and virtually dropped any demand for an international inquiry into the military’s atrocities during the war.
Without providing any evidence, Rajapakse claimed that “there is a possibility …terrorists will reorganise within this country.” Pro-LTTE groups abroad, he said, were aiming to “encourage and facilitate the resumption of an armed struggle in Sri Lanka.” There were detainees who could not be rehabilitated, including those whose “terrorist intentions may remain unchanged.”
The purpose of this “terrorist threat” is to justify the maintenance of the country’s huge military machine and police-state apparatus. The defence secretary declared that it was “of critical importance to maintain a strong [military] presence in areas… used by the LTTE for terrorist activities.” He added: “[M]aintaining a sizeable army and establishing camps in strategic locations throughout Sri Lanka is essential.”
Rajapakse then made clear that the government’s real concern was not the re-emergence of an armed LTTE, but the rising levels of social discontent. He declared that the “more realistic potential threat to our national security is the possibility that certain groups may strive to create instability” in Sri Lanka through indirect methods.
The defence secretary continued: “[H]aving seen political change accomplished in countries such as Tunisia, Egypt and Libya through uprising, some parties … might resort to such activities even here…we have already seen certain groups encouraging students to take to the streets in various protests in the recent past.”
The reference to the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt is significant. The revolutionary upheaval in Egypt in particular saw the involvement of broad layers of workers in opposition not only to the Cairo regime’s anti-democratic methods but also to the austerity agenda being imposed.
In Sri Lanka, as in Egypt, there is a deep social chasm between rich and poor. The Rajapakse government is imposing the demands of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for privatisation, deep inroads into public spending and the lowering of wages and conditions. These measures are provoking growing opposition among workers, youth and rural poor.
The government is well aware that the trade unions are increasingly unable to contain workers. At the same time, the main opposition parties—the United National Party and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)—are becoming as discredited as the government. That is why the government is preparing the state apparatus in advance to crush any protests.
The defence secretary declared that Sri Lanka was a “democratic nation” but lectured workers and youth not to exercise their democratic rights to defend their interests. In reality, Sri Lanka remains a police state. All the anti-democratic powers that were employed during the war—including arbitrary arrest and detention without trial—remain in force despite the formal ending of the country’s state of emergency. Thousands of Tamil youth remain in custody without charge, two years after the end of the war.
The Socialist Equality Party warns that the Rajapakse regime will have no hesitation in using the security apparatus against the working class and youth. Just as the opposition parties supported the civil war, so they will fall in behind any crackdown on protests and strikes that threaten the capitalist order.
The working class must prepare for the coming struggles by building a revolutionary leadership directed at abolishing the capitalist system that is the root cause of war, social inequality and attacks on democratic rights and at establishing a workers’ and peasants’ government to implement socialist policies. Such a perspective is only possible by uniting the struggles of working people in Sri Lanka with those in the Middle East, Asia and internationally for a world planned socialist economy. That is the program for which the SEP fights.

Former Tigers 'threatened' in north


BBCSinhala.com
‘These former LTTE cadres are now forced to live under the watchful eye of military intelligence,’ says Councillor MK Sivajilingam
A ceremony to mark the release of ex-Tigers (file photo)The military in Sri Lanka is constantly threatening former Tamil Tigers who were released in the north following rehabilitation, to stay away from political activities, local politicians say.
The former combatants are particularly told by military not to engage with the Peoples Struggle Movement (PSM), Velvettithurai Urban Councillor MK Sivajilingam told BBC Sandeshaya.
“This is a denial of their political rights,” he said.
PSM is a breakaway group of Janatha Vimkuthi Peramuna (JVP).
The Sri Lanka army, however, has categorically rejected the accusation.
Military rejects
Military spokesman, Brig Nihal Hapuarachchi told BBC Sandeshaya that while the police keep an eye on the activities of the former rebels, the military has no role to play after they were released.
 It is true that the police are keeping an eye on those former Tamil Tigers for about an year
Military spokesman, Brig Nihal Hapuarachchi
“These former LTTE cadres are now forced to live under the watchful eye of military intelligence,” said Mr Sivajilingam.
The situation is widespread in Jaffna islands and in the Vanni.
“Some of them are told to report to the military once a week and others are told to come once a month,” added the former MP.
He declined to reveal specific details fearing retribution by the military.
Brig Hapuarachchi, however, says neither the local media nor local councillors have raised such an issue with the military.
“It is true that the police are keeping an eye on those former Tamil Tigers for about an year,” he told BBC Sinhala service.
Denying any threat by the military the spokesman however said that the aim of the police supervision is “to take necessary action if in case these people getting involved in any unnecessary activities,” he added.
Insisting that it is not wrong for the police to supervise them, Mr Sivajilingam says it is the threats to their day to day activity that needs to be stopped.
“They are told that they will face death if they get involved in anti government politics,” he added.

SRI LANKA: Tea rich but nutrient poor



Children from the estate sector
COLOMBO, 20 January 2012 (IRIN) - Tea in Sri Lanka is one of the country's biggest cash crops, but families working on tea estates are among the nation's poorest in terms of earnings as well as nutrition, say experts who back regional approaches to tackle nutrition disparity.

One in every five children younger than five is malnourished nationwide and one in six newborns has a low birth weight, one cause of infant deaths, according to a recent study from the Colombo-based Institute of Policy Studies (IPS). 

But the situation is worse for children of tea estate workers, with one in three classified as underweight and 40 percent of babies born with too-low weight, IPS noted. 

Ramasamy Ramakrishnan, 46, a tea estate worker and father of five, and his wife, who is also a tea harvester, earn US$130 monthly to support a family of seven, including five school-aged children. 

"It is difficult. We survive somehow. But I cannot find any other job," he told IRIN. 

Big time racket of former a human smuggler and a paramilitary leader

 by A Special Correspondent in Colombo  

( January 23, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The end of war following the defeat of the LTTE has increased the financial stake of the underworld businessmen associated with the government.

Paramilitary leader hugging
President’s brother Basil Rajapakse.
One time head of the massive international human smuggling network Sathasivam Ramanathan who capitalised on the pains of the war by illegally exporting the Tamils world over has changed his business plan. The man from LTTE leader Pirabakaran’s home town Valvettithurai is enjoying all the luxuries of the government and his son Ankajan Ramanathan is the Jaffna head of the President Mahinda Rajapakse’s Sri Lanka Freedom Party. The son is the close buddy of the President’s aspiring son Namal Rajapakese who was his classmate at St Thomas College, Colombo.

Sathasivam Ramanathan, President Mahinda
Percy Rajapakse and Ankajan Ramanathan
Ramanathan’s are said to be multi billionaires is US dollar terms are residents of the upmarket Colombo 7 and are now competing with the paramilitary leader Douglas Devanada to provide government jobs for their clients at heavy cost. The price set by both villains for securing a government job with their connections to the government is going at Rs 5 lacks. There is slight variation in the terms offered. Whilst the paramilitary leader wants outright payment before securing a job, the former human smuggler offers flexible term of settling in instalments.

Paramilitary leader Douglas Devananda is also being accused of running a pimpy Manamakal (bride) brothel in the Jaffna town that came under public pressure and eventual close down.

POLITICAL DIALOGUE MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY CONCRETE CHANGES ON THE GROUND


 
During his recent visit to Sri Lanka, Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna gave support to the Sri Lankan government's intention to have a Parliamentary Select Committee work out the modalities of a political solution to the ethnic conflict.
The Indian government has consistently expressed its interest in a political solution and that the Sri Lankan government gave such assurances during the war that elicited international support. President Mahinda Rajapaksa had also informed the Indian Minister that his government would be pursuing a political solution to go beyond the present framework of devolution which was an outcome of the Indo Sri Lanka Peace Accord of 1987 and contained in the 13th Amendment to the constitution.

However, what has been said is in the realm of words and sentiments. Those who are skeptical of any movement forward have expressed concern that such proposals are mere posturing on the part of the government to gain time rather than a sincere expression of the policy of the government. The National Peace Council is of the view that procrastination will not resolve the problem but only harden the attitudes of the Tamil polity. Despite the end of the war more than two and a half years ago, little has been forthcoming so far in terms of any advance towards a political solution that is based on devolution of power. The Sri Lankan government's announcement that it is considering a senate or upper house of parliament that would be a bridge between the centre and the provinces but it cannot be a solution to the demand for autonomy in managing local and provincial affairs in the language of the Tamil people.
The National Peace Council believes that concrete deeds on the ground need to accompany the words spoken and sentiments expressed. The primary areas of concern are to improve the livelihood of the war displaced people of the North and East, for whom the Indian government has pledged the construction of 50,000 houses, of which 1,000 are now underway. Unfortunately much of the other infrastructure developments that have taken place, such as the construction of highways and government buildings, have yet to translate themselves into improved livelihoods for the war-affected people. The government needs to be supported by the international community in reconstructing the north and east according to the needs of the people. The government also needs to carry out its development in consultation with the local people through their representative institutions and in response to their priorities.
The other area of importance is that of civil-military relations. Dysfunctional civil military relations in the north and armed groups and vigilante groups posing threats to the ordinary people will only jeopardize and pose a threat to the process of rebuilding trust and reconciliation. The trust citizens in the north and east have in the security forces can either enhance or hinder the process of reconciliation. The military must be accountable for their actions in the north and east at least to a body from civil society consisting of people of the area. For a start we believe that the military command should have regular consultations with elected politicians and civil society leaders on issues of concerns to them at local levels. Civilians need to feel that military presence in these areas is to support and empower war affected communities and not rule over them but sustain and protect democratic values. In this regard the following recommendation of the LLRC becomes relevant: “(9.134). …..the Commission, as a policy, strongly advocates and recommends to the Government that the Security Forces should disengage itself from all civil administration related activities as rapidly as possible…..” Taking this concept further it will be necessary for the military to be withdrawn to barracks and the police entrusted with the maintenance of law and order as called for by the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission.

Gotabhaya’s money invested in the leisure sector through Dilith

Monday, 23 January 2012 
Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa has invested part of the monies earned by him in the leisure sector. The monies have been invested through his close friend, millionaire businessman Dilith Jayaweera and MP Duminda Silva’s brother, Chairman of the ABC Media Network, Raynor Silva.
Dilith Jayaweera and Raynor Silva have purchased the Citrus Hotel in Hikkaduwa. The hotel was declared open by Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa.
The Defence Secretary is also looking at setting up several luxury hotels on the Eastern coast. The government therefore has taken measures to sell him some land in the coastal areas of the Eastern Province at dirt cheap prices. Lands Minister Janaka Bandara Tennekoon has also objected to this illegal land grab.
Dilith Jayaweera has also purchased several super luxury hotels in Colombo. He has also purchased the up market shopping complex, Liberty Plaza in Colpetty as well.

Sri Lanka: No Progress on Justice


Human Rights Watch(New York) – The Sri Lankan government in the past year failed to advance justice and accountability for the victims of the country’s 26-year-long civil conflict, Human Rights Watch said today in its World Report 2012. While Sri Lanka’s war-ravaged north and east became more open, the government deepened repression of basic freedoms throughout the country.

The government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa continued to stall on accountability for abuses by the security forces, threatened media and civil society groups, and largely ignored complaints of insecurity and land grabbing in the north and east, Human Rights Watch said. The long-awaited report of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), published in December, largely absolved the military for its conduct in the bloody final months of the war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which ended in May 2009.     Full Story>>>