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, April 1, 2013


Gentlemen Are Recognized



By Ravi Perera -April 1, 2013 
Ravi Perera
Colombo Telegraph“Gentlemen are recognized…” goes the introduction to a much repeated radio advertisement promoting a  brand of men’s  clothing , they ; “ … choose  shirts with firm collars , neat cuts, send flowers to their mothers, walk old ladies across the road, are interesting and  are not ‘ smelly’… ”. Apparently, apart from admiration of the opposite sex there are many bonuses awaiting the (Sri Lankan variety of )gentleman, including automatic up-grades at check-in counters, presumably at the Bandaranaike International Air Port and now at the newly opened  Mattala.
Commercials, although seldom reflective of everyday realities, can nevertheless tell you a lot about the target group; their ambitions, yearnings and even fears. We don’t see on TV ads eateries with the inevitable flies, dead cockroaches, open drains, smelly toilets etc which according to our health inspectors are the general standard here. Instead, what will be generally shown is a plush establishment serving food to a yuppie looking crowd. And according to the commercials most people in this country live in large well turned out houses and spend their time pronouncing wise sounding statements about various commercial products.
It is only natural to want something different, particularly if it appears a better choice than the accustomed fare. Looking at popular Indian commercials today for instance you can be forgiven for thinking that the sub-continent is packed with casual looking youngsters, running to the beach for water sports and a sun tan. The picture is bright clean and open, with hardly any people and no mangy dogs or emaciated cows to distract us from the slithering Indian beauties munching their vegetarian hamburgers. It almost seems like the USA has added a large exotic State to its union.
But that picture does not fit in with our perceptions of that country. The endless crowds, the depressing poverty, the noise and the dirt have left images of a perennial India which is at variance with the world of the advertisers. The typical Indian, if it is possible to stereotype when describing a billion people, is of a certain resigned complacency, heavy ritualism and that confused aggression of a people living on the edge. Slightest deviation or compromise with the exactness of the ritual, even when performing the simplest domestic act, can push one in to a mental abyss. But what has gone on for centuries in that land is not the stuff that can sell the wares of the advertiser. So they create a fairy tale made up of foreign things and settings, so alien in the context that they become slapstick.
For the Sri Lankan men’s wear commercial to be effective, recognition as a gentleman ought to have social value in society. The idea of a gentleman, a superior kind of male defined by a man’s qualities rather than his birth, came with the European colonizers. Like many other ideas that had to cross a huge cultural barrier, the concept of a gentleman too had to undergo a localizing process before comprehension. It needed to be understood through indigenous eyes to make sense in the new setting. Attributes such as Western attire, an aversion to any outdoor activity or physical exertion and the use of the English language have come to the fore in determining a gentleman. A culture, where to be served first or not having to stand  in line is considered a symbol of a higher status, redefined the concept of a gentleman in its own image.
In the age of imperialism building far flung empires called for, tough, brave and capable men. The scope of the empires built by small countries like Portugal, Holland and England speak amply for their mettle. (It is noteworthy that even in the much changed world of the 21 Century these countries are very much in the First World category)  But in that culture men were also expected to be chivalrous and gentle. These were prerequisites for promotion in the social ladder in the mother country with many advantageous attached to being considered a gentleman. This did not mean that a gentleman was not martial or lacking in manly qualities. But only that these qualities are tempered by a certain code of manners and conduct. Among other things,  a gentleman will be    up-front , play by the rules, pay  his bills promptly, honour his word, hold  doors for others and not jump a queue. It is difficult to envisage a gentleman who is not of a serious turn of mind and of a certain level of learning.
Of course one person’s pirate is another’s admiral. A chap who will be peremptorily shown the door at a gentlemen’s club in England may become the toast of the town in Colombo. But realistically, no society can operate happily having as their   governing rules the opposite of what is expected of gentlemen.  It is inconceivable for any group to function on the principles of   unreliability, dishonesty, arbitrariness or social insensitivity.
At the highest levels of society, among our legislators, top public servants, professionals, businessmen and artists who can we confidently say would qualify to be thought of as a gentleman? Only yesterday, while driving I was suddenly confronted by a convoy of fast moving and powerful vehicles. Because of the tinted glasses   on them it was impossible to say who the VIP the convoy was transporting. The motor cyclists acting as out-riders performed crazy maneuvers to cut a path for the convoy while the other escorting vehicles blinked their lights and honked endlessly to shoo the road users away from them. In case their message was unclear, they also waived their hands vigorously as if performing an endless exercise of calisthenics, but with a definite air of intimidation. For a person seeing this phenomenon for the first time the whirlwind of the convoy’s rapid movement would have looked like the rapid movement of a supernatural force, a powerful being on a mysterious journey.
But all the rude hurry and disruption was for one man to go somewhere. His trip was more important than whatever else the others were doing on the road at that time. That man sat   cozily in one of the limousines, indifferent to the inconvenience his travel was causing thousands of commuters on his way. Perhaps those thousands are themselves unable to assess the true nature and meaning   of that one man’s conduct. For both the perpetrator and the victims there was nothing wrong with the picture on that busy Colombo Street, sweltering in the hot sun. In the mindset of the madding crowd it may even be a gentleman on the move.
No wonder they all want to be recognized as such……
TamilNet[TamilNet, Monday, 01 April 2013, 07:39 GMT]
An SL Military intelligence backed attack that took place in a Marriage Hall at Aavarangkaal in Puththoor, Jaffna, on last Wednesday and Thursday, shows to what extent the occupying Sinhala military has determined to engineer caste and anti-diaspora violence in select rural areas of Jaffna Peninsula to ultimately make Eezham Tamils weakened as a nation in the island, news sources in Jaffna said. The Marriage Hall that was preparing for a marriage function and its manager who is a retired Village Officer, were brutally attacked by a gang of youth organized by the occupying Sinhala military and its collaborators in Jaffna. The reason for the attack is said to be a publication coming from the diaspora in the UK that was stocked at the Marriage Hall for release. The publication was interpreted as a talk on caste and false accusation against SL military. 

The Aavarang-kaal village association in the UK has recently published a book in Tamil, titled “Aavarangkaal the Siva Bhomi in the 20th Century.”

The book, written by a retired school principal coming from the village and now living in the UK, was historically documenting communities that inhabited the village in the last century and their professions. The book was also documenting the killings of the Sinhala military that took place at the village.

The intelligence of the occupying Sinhala military organized some youth to interpret the book as talking about caste and carried out the attack on the Marriage Hall where the book was stocked for release. The copies of the book were also burnt during the attack.

The attack was carried out on Wednesday evening and again on Thursday, when the hall was being arranged for a wedding function.

The Marriage Hall management was accused for distributing the book. The attackers also ransacked arrangements that had been set for the marriage function at the hall called Sivashakthi Ma’nimandapam.

Media sources have witnessed the attack being instigated by the Sinhala military intelligence.

The Aavarangkaal association in the UK is engaged in various social and development activities in the village. Some members of the association have long connections with parliamentary democratic shade of Tamil national politics. 

The aim of the present attack by the occupying military is multifaceted, ranging from reintroducing caste animosities to disrupting the diaspora’s engagements with the village through temples and Marriage Halls, media sources that personally witnessed the nature of the attack said.

The attack campaign in which paramilitary collaborators of the Sinhala military and Dan TV played roles, marks the extent the occupying Sinhala military has gone in engineering national and social disintegration among Tamils, the news sources commented.

The Aavarangkaal-Puththoor region is one of the localities of the Jaffna Peninsula that is particularly targeted by genocidal Sri Lanka and by its occupying military, in converting Tamils into Buddhists. 

While a new genre ideological outlook, involvement and activities are needed in democratically mobilising the masses facing global imperialist games, sections in the diaspora in the West chickening out from such a polity that it would offend the West and harping on tracing steps back to the electoral deceit of the Establishments, is also a reason for the gullible among the struggle-needing youth getting manipulated by the genocidal Sinhala military, the news sources in Jaffna further commented. 

Left circles in Jaffna confirmed that they had nothing to do with the incident and they never collaborate in such mischievous acts carried out by the SL military.

Meanwhile, writing on the incident in the Sinhala military’s website, on last Friday, Sayuri Anusara Madduma Liyanage, who is an intelligence officer of the occupying military said: “ […] Civilians in the area who opposed the “Avarangal Onriam” – based anti social campaign had claimed that the false information in the book directly affect the peaceful environment prevailing in the area and invite terrorism again. They further launched a protest saying that security forces as mentioned in the book, are not involved in killings or abductions in the area.”

“[…] Irate civilians …warned the members of so called “Avarangal Onriam” that they would face bad repercussions if they try to organize that type of campaigns again,” the Sinhala military intelligence officer hinted at what the occupying military would do for the diaspora engaging with its kith and kin.

The Sinhala military intelligence officer has circulated his news version to various agencies and psyops outfits of the occupying SL military.

The e-mail sent by SL military intelligence source to SL military psyops circles and to media source
The from and subject part of the e-mail sent by an alleged SL military intelligence source to SL military psyops circles and to media sources


External Links:
Civil Military Coordination Jaffna:Avarankal Civilians Get United against Diaspora’s False Propaganda
Next contingent of Sri Lanka blue berets leave for Haiti tomorrow

Lankapage LogoMar 31, Colombo: The next contingent of Sri Lankan troops for the United Nations mission in Haiti will leave the country tomorrow.
A contingent of 400 soldiers from the Sinha regiment will leave for Haiti on Monday (April 1) to assist the UN Peace Keeping Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) there.
A 350-strong contingent has left the country for Haiti on Thursday March 28.
Military spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasooriya said this is the 18th batch of Sri Lankan peacekeepers on UN missions.
According to the military, Sri Lankan peace keepers provide security to all key towns along main roads and suburbs in Haiti, preventing different armed groups from engaging in violence.
Sri Lanka is a committed partner for UN peacekeeping operations with a total of 1,071 men and women from the three Armed Forces and the Police currently serving in seven different Peacekeeping Missions.

The Great Sri Lankan army. Look what there are doing under peace keeping


Uploaded on Feb 16, 2009
This says all about the Sri Lankan army. If they can do this kind of things in Haiti under UN supervision,
Imagine what they can do to Tamils. Many sinhala ppl will still deny this. Many rape cases in Sri Lanka are still unhanded. Why? Their intention is to fight LTTE and save Tamils? Who is going to save the Tamils from this Army?



Rape by Sri Lankan troops resurfaces – in Haiti

[TamilNet, Sunday, 04 November 2007, 07:31 GMT]
TamilNetThe United Nations has asked Sri Lanka to prosecute ‘to the fullest extent of the law’ 108 Sri Lankan soldiers with the UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti for sexual exploitation and sexual abuse of minors, including prostitution, the Sunday Times reported. The number is one of the biggest single withdrawal of soldiers from a UN peacekeeping mission. During the conflict numerous local and international NGOs protested both frequent rapes by security forces and the climate of impunity in which they occur. 

The charges against the Sri Lankan soldiers may include rape (which is constituted a "war crime" in the context of military conflicts) involving children under 18 years of age, the paper said.

The ejection of 108 out of Sri Lanka’s contingent of 950 for sex crimes highlights the frequency of rape during Sri Lankan operation in the Northeast during the decades long conflict.

In 2001, the year before a ceasefire ended the fighting, Amnesty International said it “has noted a marked rise in allegations of rape by [Sri Lankan] police, army and navy personnel.”

“Among the victims of rape by the security forces are many internally displaced women, women who admit being or having been members of the LTTE and female relatives of members or suspected male members of the LTTE,” Amnesty said.

“Reports of rape in custody concern children as young as 14,” Amnesty also said.

Amnesty said “to [our] knowledge, not a single member of the Sri Lankan security forces has been brought to trial in connection to incidents of rape in custody although one successful prosecution has been brought in a case where the victim of rape was also murdered.”

Also in 2001, Amnesty wrote to then Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga, “urging her to take action to stop rape by security forces andbring perpetrators to justice” in response to reports of rape by security forces “in Mannar,Batticaloa,Negombo and Jaffna.”

“To date, no response has been received to the appeal,” Amnesty later said in a special report titled “Sri Lanka: Rape in Custody” which was published in January 2002, just as the Norwegian brokered Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) came into being. 

Earlier, in March 2000, the then United Nations Special Rapporteur on violence against women, Radhika Coomaraswamy, expressed her “grave concern” over the lack of serious investigation into allegations of gang rape and murder of women and girls by the Sri Lankan security forces.

In 2000, the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) protested that “Sri Lankan security forces are using systematic rape and murder of Tamil women to subjugate the Tamil population... Impunity continues to reign as rape is used as a weapon of war in Sri Lanka.”

Apart from the ejection of 108 Sri Lankan troops from Haiti, the actions Colombo takes against them would also determine whether the UN will deploy Sri Lankan soldiers in future peacekeeping operations, the Sunday Times said.

A UN source told the paper that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations would monitor what action the government proposed to take against the 108 soldiers who were part of a 950-member contingent from Sri Lanka.

"If they are found guilty, they should be punished for their crimes under the criminal justice system in the country," he said. 

The UN would be very unhappy, he said, if only administrative and disciplinary actions were taken against the soldiers. 

Asked how many soldiers would be repatriated, UN spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters Friday that all 108 soldiers would be repatriated on disciplinary grounds.

The total number is one of the biggest single withdrawal of soldiers from a UN peacekeeping mission.

Asked about the nature of the charges, a UN spokeswoman said the allegations were against members of the Sri Lankan battalion stationed in a variety of locations in Haiti, and were of a "transactional sex" nature.

She also acknowledged that they involved prostitution, including in some cases with minors.

In its 1999 annual report, Amnesty International, said rape of female detainees was used amongst a range of torture methods.

In a statement to the UN in 1998, the World Organisation against Torture observed: “Sri Lankan soldiers have raped both women and young girls on a massive scale, and often with impunity, since reporting often leads to reprisals against the victims and their families.”

“The consistent policy of rape and violence against Tamil women that we have documented for many years is a fundamental military tactic of the Sri Lankan forces,” International Educational Development, an NGO, also told the UN that year.

Human rights NGOs have frequently protested the impunity Sri Lankan soldiers enjoy regarding rapes and other abuses.

“Only one of the thousands of rapes which have been reported, has resulted in a conviction,” Pax Romana said.

“There also seems to be little point to expect justice on the basis of the constitution since the constitution itself provides the mechanisms and justifications for the commission of these war crimes and encourages impunity.”

Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa asserted in a local meeting last week, when commenting on the Sri Lankan armed forces and their peace keeping missions, that, “I respect them profoundly and consider them as the most disciplined Forces in the world. They have not killed or raped anybody.”

400 'Sinha regiment' Sri Lanka soldiers leave for Haiti

Tamil Guardian 31 March 2013
400 soldiers from the Sri Lankan army's 'Sinha regiment' are set to leave for Haiti as part of a UN Peacekeeping mission later this week.
The deployment follows the expulsion of Sri Lankan troops for sexually abusing Haitian minors in 2007, with no prosecutions or punishments having taken place. 111 soldiers and 3 officers were repatriated back to Sri Lanka after being part of UN mission in Haiti and were accused of a string of sexual assaults, including rape of children as young as 7 years old.
350 soldiers already left for Haiti earlier this month.

Military spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasooriya stated that this was the 18th batch of Sri Lankan soldiers, almost entirely Sinhalese, serving peacekeeping missions.
See our earlier posts:









The Sri Lankan army is essentially Sinhalese and it has an inherent hatred for Tamils

By  P C Vinoj Kumar
   Editor
01 Apr 2013
Posted 17-Jun-2011
Vol 2 Issue 24
Not all Sinhalese are evil. Neither is every Tamil a saint. But the fact remains that every soldier in the Sri Lankan army who fought the war against the LTTE during 2008-2009 was a Sinhalese.

This background information is essential for any non-Tamil to understand how the Sri Lankan army can be so brutal against its own civilians. In Sri Lanka, Tamils are not treated on par with the Sinhalese. They are not inducted into the army, which is almost a 100 percent Sinhalese force.
Horrific footage: Channel 4 footage shows a Lankan soldier getting ready to shoot a suspected Tamil militant in cold blood
Are there any Tamils in the force at all? The then Sri Lankan deputy high commissioner in Chennai P M Amza refused to reveal the number of Tamils in the Lankan army when I sought the information from him in an email interview in 2007. I was a correspondent with Tehelka then.

Having reported on the Sri Lankan Tamils issue for many years, I have noticed the deep-seated prejudice that most Sinhalese harbour against Tamils.

In April 2009, Harinder Baweja, Tehelka’s Editor, Investigations, asked me to rush to Colombo to check out the ground situation as the war was entering its final stages.

I applied for a visa. They kept me on tenterhooks for over a week. Sri Lankan consulate officials in Chennai asked me to contact their foreign ministry office in Colombo. I spoke with many officials, but nothing worked.

Harinder did not understand what was happening. She kept saying that many Indian journalists had already landed in Colombo. Why then I was being denied a visa?

It was true that Colombo rolled out the red carpet to many Indian journalists, but most of them toed the army line. They flew in army helicopters to the war front, and reported what the Lankan officials told them.

My reporting on the Lankan issue had always been fair. I spoke to both sides - the Tamil militants and the army - which the Lankan officials did not apparently like. Was it the reason I was denied a visa? Or was it simply because I was a Tamil myself?

Forget that. The point is, Colombo is a spoilt brat. She only wants good things said about her. She wants to be caressed and fondled at all times. She has been fed and pampered by India and China, who have an eye on her assets - which includes her strategic geographical position. She lives on their money. Like overbearing mistresses she has now come to believe that she can get away with anything, even mass murder.
Nothing like this has been seen on television before.
But Colombo has made a grave mistake in overestimating the influence of her friends. She has always been dim witted. India and China cannot go beyond a certain limit to save her.

There is mounting evidence of Colombo’s war crimes. Channel 4, a British TV channel, which has aired horrifying video footage of the brutal acts of Sinhalese soldiers in the past, recently showed more clips that provide fresh evidence to haul up Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa before the International Criminal Court on charges of war crime.

The new footages show naked bodies of Tamil women, who seem to have been sexually abused before being killed. Lewd remarks from the soldiers like, “I really want to cut her tits off, if no one was around,” bring out the beastly nature of the government forces.

International community is losing its patience with Colombo with each passing day.

Responding to the Channel 4 footage, Britain’s foreign office minister Alistair Burt has said: “Since the end of the conflict the UK has called for an independent, thorough and credible investigation of the allegations that war crimes were committed during the hostilities and the UK Government expects to see progress by the end of the year.

If the Sri Lankan government does not respond we will support the international community in revisiting all options available to press the Sri Lankan Government to fulfil its obligations.”

The Weekend Leader was first among the Indian media to forecast what was coming for Rajapaksa. In April, soon after the UN Panel submitted its indicting report on Sri Lanka, we wrote an article headlined, ‘Ground prepared for Mahinda Rajapaksa’s tryst with destiny’.

We will continue to keep the spotlight on the issue till justice is rendered to the Tamils.

Also ReadVoice of Jayalalithaa may be a dawn of new hope for Sri Lankan Tamils

Sri Lanka’s National Anthem Betrayed!

Colombo Telegraph
By Sharmini Serasinghe -March 31, 2013
Sharmini Serasinghe
“….In wisdom and strength renewed,
Ill-will, hatred, strife all ended,
In love enfolded, a mighty nation
Marching onward, all as one,
Lead us, Mother, to fullest freedom.”
These are the mighty words Lanka’s National Anthem ends with, which has no relevance today!
Perhaps it should now read as-
“….In ignorance and strength reduced,
Ill-will, hatred, strife all begun,
In hate enfolded, a once mighty nation
Marching backwards, all as one,
Lead us not, Mother, to perpetual hell.”
How many of us, especially those of our political leaders pay heed to the significance of our National Anthem when they so proudly stand up and pay lip service to it? Where is the “wisdom” in their leadership? Where is the “ill-will, hatred, strife all ended”? Are we a “mighty nation in love enfolded marching forward as one”? Where, Oh where is the “fullest freedom”?
Doesn’t our National Anthem sound hypocritical today? But yet we stand and salute it, uttering its words that hold no relevance today.
Had there been such a thing as a forthright political leadership with “wisdom” in Lanka today, we would be seeing all attempts at healing the wounds of our aggrieved brethren of the North, caused by mistakes of the past, that have plagued this nation for so long. This ought to have been the single most important action of such “wisdom” had we had it, upon ending a protracted and bloody civil war of 30 years.
Instead, in the absence of such “wisdom”, Lanka continues to stand today with open and gaping wounds camouflaged by bandages in the form of new infrastructure as in roads, highways, airports et al in the name of ‘development’- what better example of placing the cart before the horse!
To expect our political leadership to have such qualities as wisdom, vision and direction would be asking for too much. To them, warmongering appears to be a lucrative hobby, while kindling and keeping the embers of disharmony among the populace glowing and alive. After all, peace, unity and harmony in the country don’t bring in the filthy lucre. Wars do!
Not satisfied with polarizing us by our ethnicity alone, we now see a focus on widening the divide with a religious flavour as well. To them, our elected leaders, nothing is sacred. So we now have the sacred Saffron Robe being wielded to silence the ‘other’ into submission in the name of Buddhism, thereby paving the way for renewed “ill-will, hatred and strife” of a much greater magnitude.
Hot on the heels of an erratic group of unorthodox ‘Buddhist monks’ questionable by repute hitting the streets, spewing hate and venom against the ‘other’, there rises the ‘Aranthalawa Massacre Memorial Museum’ in the predominantly Muslim populated Eastern district of Ampara.  The scenes are depicted through gory sculptures of the massacred Buddhist monks in their death throes in a bus.
This tragic and unfortunate incident in Aranthalawa in 1987 indeed sent shock waves throughout the nation, but there were equally horrifying massacres that took place throughout the 30 years of war. Therefore, will such memorial museums be set up in each of those places where such horrific massacres took place, so we will keep bumping into them at every corner, keeping us constantly reminded of their significance and thereby keep the flames of ethnic disharmony permanently alive?
How can reconciliation ever be possible with such massacre sites being turned into permanent ‘reminders’? However if the objective of such, is to portray and preserve for posterity the evils of a ruthless terrorist outfit as the LTTE never to be repeated, then shouldn’t there be a balance in this exercise, by setting in motion the likes of the LLRC recommendations? Wouldn’t this prevent the need for such ‘memorials’ to sprout in the future as well?
It appears the only vision the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and its cohorts have is to ‘divide and rule’ no matter the cost. First we had the father of the SLFP SWRD Bandaranaike setting the trend with his infamous ‘Language Act’ that divided the Sinhalese and Tamils ad infinitum, the results of which we still suffer today. And now we have his successors taking his ‘policy’ to the next level by using religion to drive the citizenry further apart.
One need not be endowed with too much of a vivid imagination to compare our current set of ruling politicians to a group of bad actors. They appear to have been thrown on to a stage and asked to perform without a script. As a result they seem to think only the gallery comprising the SinhalaBuddhist vote base must be kept entertained with cheap gimmicks and other such, they like to see and hear, so they the actors with no talent could remain on stage for ever.
Why do we need to hold expensive elections to choose such leaders? The law of the jungle would have sufficed. Therefore let our bankrupt rulers not lead us up the garden path. Let us not get caught up in their vile schemes that will once again end up in chaos of blood-letting proportions. Lanka is not the playground of our elected political leaders and we are not their puppets.
If Lanka is supposed to be a Buddhist country based on the argument that the majority are Buddhists, then it is the bounden duty of the ‘majority’ sans the politicians to live and lead by example. The ‘majority’ must earn the right to call Lanka a Buddhist country if they must. Therefore it is up to the ‘majority’ to nip the mistrust that is being gradually made to take root amongst us in the bud.
The ‘majority’ if they are true Buddhists must display their magnanimity by showing a sincere willingness to accommodate those of other faiths as well and not denigrate them. Therefore if Lanka is a Buddhist country the ‘majority’ should be propagating peace, harmony and unity amongst all as portrayed through our National Anthem.
There are of course a handful of those who are willing to prostitute themselves, and be led by their noses by their so called leaders. We also find quite a number of them spewing their venom and hatred of the ‘other’ in the comment threads of the likes of the Colombo Telegraph, so why look further. These are the sycophants who see all of the Emperor’s New Clothes, even when he’s stark naked, and cheer him on.
All of us Lankans have suffered enough by being branded by our ethnicity and religion for too long. We have all had enough of being used by politicians for their own ends.  We have all been labeled as this and that ad nauseam for what purpose? Time to wake up Lanka!
Let us start living up to our National Anthem even at this late stage. We have the golden opportunity to realise this, even though symbolic, in the form of the Sinhala and Tamil New Year dawning in under a fortnight from now. It is a good place to start, so let us all Buddhists, Hindus, Christians and Muslims from this day forward, celebrate this event as one, as the Lankan National New Year. At least that way, when we next sing our National Anthem, we will know that we are not lying through our teeth!
*Sharmini Serasinghe was Director Communications of the former Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process (SCOPP) under Secretary Generals Jayantha Dhanapala and Dr. John Gooneratne. She counts over thirty years in journalism in both the print and electronic media.

Dilith Jayaweera to disclose ‘secrets’ of success ! at the Management Conference 2013 - Transcending Failure a Story of Success on 2nd of April

This is not an April’s Fools Joke !!!
Dilith Jayaweera, then a humble folk , who travelled in a small  Motor Cycle to the Law Faculty of the Colombo University Campus, is today travelling in a Luxury BMW and wearing an expensive Rolex Watch.
Dilith is going to disclose the ‘secrets’ of his huge and sudden success at the Management Conference 2013 organised by the MBA Alumni of the Colombo University on 2nd April 2013, together with Tiran Alles’s Ceylon Today carrying on a media blitz to tell his ‘fairy tale story’, in the presence of popular Sunil Perera of Gypsies, successful businessman Dhammika Perera and war hero Shavindra Silva.
Dilith is expected to disclose all his ‘inner secrets’ and strategies of success including the following:
# How much and manner of profits made on the election campaign 2004 for President Kumaratunga ?
# How TV License for Derena TV was got from President Kumaratunga without any payment ?
# How much and manner of profits made on the 2005 election campaign of President Rajapaksa ?
# Profits made on advertising for government ministries and institutions and their names ?
# How much and the manner of profits made on the 2010 election campaign of President Rajapaksa ?
# As the patriot he is, how much taxes were paid on these profits made on these election campaigns ?
# How much profits he made in buying and selling of Shares in the Colombo Stock Exchange ?
# Prices at which Shares were purchased and sold to make such profits, and the names of Shares ?
# As the patriot he is, how much taxes were paid on these profits made on the Stock Exchange ?
# Whether he is an ‘economic man’ with his killing fields being the Colombo Stock Exchange ?
# How the Share prices in the Colombo Stock Exchange went up - automatically or manipulatively ?
# Manner in which he purchased the controlling interest in Liberty Plaza, including Pettah Land ?
# Whether Singaporean shareholder of Liberty Plaza and Pettah Land sold voluntarily part of Shares ?
# Whether he scandalized the SEC investigations resulting in two Chairman resigning in disgust ?
# How his Chairman in Colombo Land and Divasa Finance, Nalaka Godahewa became SEC Chairman ?
# How 17 SEC investigations have not been concluded, including involving some of his Companies ?
# Whether he manipulated the George Steuart’s Managing Director to sell his Shares ?
# Whether he attempted to get Kollupitiya market from Mayor using the powerful Secretary’s name ?
Don’t travel to Tamil Nadu: Defence Ministry


By Sunimalee Dias-Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Sundaytimes Sri Lanka

Defence Ministry officials are advising Sri Lankans against travelling to Tamil Nadu in the wake of recent attacks on Sri Lankans and Sri Lankan institutions there.
Travel from Colombo to Chennai has also dropped by at least 30 per cent in recent weeks, travel trade sources said. �A two-hour meeting was held recently between ministry, airline and travel trade officials in Colombo. It is learnt that Indian visas issued in Colombo have seen a 10 per cent drop in the recent past.
Travel Agents Association of Sri Lanka President Saman Premakumara said Defence Ministry officials had advised them to avoid Tamil Nadu as much as possible.
Though this was not issued as a directive but only as an advice to the local industry in relation to Sri Lankans’ safety, the travel agents had been told to avoid all land travel in Tamil Nadu and permission was granted only for transit at the Chennai airport, he said.
However, Mr. Premakumara said that in view of the concerns raised they had decided to avoid even transiting in Chennai.
Sri Lanka Association of Inbound Travel Operators President Mahen Kariyawasam said the defence officials asked them to avoid the Chennai airport, even for those going on pilgrimages. They were advised to travel directly to Bodh Gaya or via New Delhi.
He said these travel plans would be reviewed after a month.�SriLankan Airlines Chief Marketing Officer G.T. Jayaseelan said there had been a 20 per cent drop in air travel to Chennai. As a result, they had reduced flights by about 50 per cent. �Spicejet Colombo General Manager J.D. Weimen said they had seen a drop of around 25-30 per cent over the last three to four weeks due to the recent media reports on the unrest in Chennai against Sri Lankans.
Air Indian Express Manager Tony Fernando said their load factor had dropped from 85 per cent to 50 per cent but they too were continuing to operate the same number of flights to Chennai.�Air India Express was bound to lose revenue, he said down from the monthly Rs. 50 million earnings to even less than Rs. 30 million this month.

CPC loses US$ 8.9 M

The purchase of an additional 120,000 metric tonnes of fuel oil from a Singapore-based company has cost the cash-strapped Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) an additional whooping US$ 8.9 million (8,935,428), Ceylon Today can reveal.



In spite of financial losses, the CPC has extended the agreement for further six months, to purchase another 480,000-560,000 MT at an inflated price, which would cost the CPC an additional US$ 1.5 million per shipment.


According to the latest terms, which have been inserted to the agreement, PV Oil would receive an additional US$ 5 per barrel. Under these terms, the CPC would lose a minimum of US$ 1.5 million per shipment, according to the documentations of the agreement obtained by Ceylon Today.


The trade unionists alleged the consignment was increased from 240,000 MT to 320,000 MT by the current management, which had executed an arbitrary decision taken by the ex-chairman. The trade unions alleged though the premium offered by the Singapore based company, PV Oil Singapore, was competitive and advantageous to the CPC, the payment terms in the agreement have been arbitrarily amended by the previous administrations.


Trade unionist, Ananda Palitha of Jathika Sevaka Sangamaya said two ex-chairmen had manipulated the agreement in order to grant undue financial advantage to the Singaporean company.
The trade unions alleged, in spite of financial losses incurred due to the previous agreement, the current administration has decided to extend the agreement with PV Oil Singapore for the purchase of another 480,000-560,000MT for the next six months.


According to the latest terms, which had been inserted to the agreement, PV Oil would receive an additional US$ 5 per barrel. Under these terms, the CPC would lose a minimum of US$ 1.5 million per every shipment, the trade unions alleged.
Earlier, when contacted, Minister of Petroleum Industries, Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, said the government would negotiate with the Vietnamese Government over the agreement it had with the PV Oil, which is a Vietnamese State-owned company.


"Since the agreement is a government-to-government agreement, we cannot arbitrarily end it," he said.
Managing Director of the CPC, Susantha de Silva, was not available for comment. Repeated telephone calls to his mobile went unanswered.
2013-04-01

Colonizing Childhood and Zionist Pedagogy: Interview With Prof. Nurit Peled-Elhanan

-1 Apr, 2013

nurit_peledClick to download app from Apple iTunesNurit Peled-Elhanan is a professor of language and education at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, peace educator and activist and co-laureate along with late Prof. Izzat Gazzawi of the 2001 Sakharov Prize for Human Rights and the Freedom of Speech awarded by the European parliament. Peled-Elhanan has translated Albert Memmi‘s Le racisme (1982) and Marguerite Duras‘ Ã‰crire (1993) into Hebrew. In 1997, her daughter Smadar, aged 13, was killed during a suicide bomb attack in Jerusalem. “Terrorist attacks like this are the direct consequence of the oppression, slavery, humiliation and state of siege imposed on the Palestinians”, she told reporters in the aftermath of Smadar’s death. She and her family work with the Palestinian and Israeli Bereaved Families for Peace. Professor Peledhas critically dissected the ideological content of Israeli school books for the past five years. She considers children as victims of Israel’s militaristic, settler-colonial culture. Her radical views have exacted a professional cost. “University professors have stopped inviting me to conferences. And when I do speak, the most common reaction is, ‘you are anti-Zionist’”! “Change”, she said, “will only come when the Americans stop providing us with 1 million US dollars a day to maintain this regime of occupation, racism and supremacy”.
At a mass rally of Women in Black in September 1997, she addressed the gathering:
Wars are waged for no other reason than the insanity and megalomania of the so-called leaders and heads of state. For them children are no more than abstract notions: You kill one of mine, I will kill 300 of yours and the account is settled… “Satan has not yet devised a Vengeance for the death of a young child” said the Jewish poet Bialik, and that is not because Satan has no means to do so, but because after the death of a child there is no more death for there is no more life. The child takes the war and the future of the war into his little grave to rest with his little bones…I wish to revive two slogans that were misused by the Israeli right wing and have not been heard since the present government came to power. The first is that “Brothers are not to be forsaken”. Our brothers and sisters in the refugee camps and under occupation, who are deprived of food and livelihood and of all their human rights, should not be forsaken now. The other slogan is, “The uprooting of settlements tears the nation apart”. Uprooting of olive groves and vineyards, the demolition of houses and confiscation of land will tear apart our already endangered species of peace-seeking people and will bring it to extinction. And when this species no longer exists, there will be nothing left to write, nothing left to read, nothing left to say except for the muted story of slain youth.
This interview with Professor Peled took place during the fourth international session of the Russell Tribunal on Palestine (RToP) in New York City, November 6-7, 2012. The theme for the fourth session was “US Complicity and UN Failings in Dealing with Israel’s Violations of International Law Toward the Palestinian People”. Speakers included former adviser to Palestinian negotiators Diana Buttu, Israeli historian Ilan Pappe, author and activist Ben White, the Palestinian Center for Human Right’s Raji Sourani and others.
The RToP was launched in Brussels on March 4th 2009 chaired by Stéphane Hessel, ambassador of France and among the initiators were Ken Coates, Chairman, Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation, Leila Shahid, General Delegate of Palestine to the European Union, Belgium and Luxembourg and Professor Peled. Speaking at the press conference in Brussels, Professor Peled remarked:
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