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

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Six Incidents of Religious Persecution in Sri Lanka in June 2013 Where Christian Churches were Under Attack

Six Incidents of Religious Persecution in Sri Lanka in June 2013 Where Christian Churches were Under Attack

SRI LANKA BRIEFThursday, July 4, 2013

Sri Lanka saw six cases of religious persecution in the month of June alone, all of which took place in the districts of Hambantota, Batticaloa, Kegalle, and Kalutara. 
“After a relative lull during the month of May, incidents of religious persecution once again increased during this month,” according to the June 2013 Incident Report of the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka (NCEASL), an umbrella organization of evangelical churches and denominations in the Sinhala-Buddhist majority country. 

On June 5, four unidentified persons attempted to burn the St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic church in Angulana, Moratuwa, and Kaluthara District. They broke into the church during the night and to poured petrol on the Blessed Sacrament,” said NCEASL in its incident report. “However, it had not caught fire and about thirty lit matches were found on the premises.”

The perpetrators also damaged a 143-year-old statue of the church’s Blessed Virgin Mary and destroyed sound system. According to local news, the perpetrators were later apprehended and subsequently released upon request of the Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith, Arch Bishop of the Catholic Church. 

In the same district, two days later, a Kings Revival Church pastor was interrogated on June 7, by two policemen about his church activities in the village of Ingiriya. His church is composed of 60-70 members. The officers informed him of the many posters scattered all over the town that spoke against the Christian churches; “We don’t need a church in the village; all we need is a Buddhist temple. Chase the Christian pastor from the village!” 

In another incident On June 15, Buddhist monks and villagers, among who were several Hindus, held a protest meeting against the Christians living in Gangavereliya, a village Kegalle District in the southwest. Posters were spread the village informing people about the meeting. “The purpose of the meeting was to restrict activities of the churches and unethical conversions,” said NCEASL. “At least one pastor in the area had received threats to stop worship services.” 

In Hambantota District, 218 km. southeast of capital city Colombo, Buddhist monks accosted an Assemblies of God (AOG) pastor after accusing him of taking pictures and videos of their meeting on June 16. The accusers were members of an extremist group, Ravana Balaya, and the said meeting was held as a “protest against Christians” according to NCEASL. In response to the accusations, the pastor said that while on his way to village shops, and was merely passing by the meeting, when the Ravana Balaya monks spotted him. They then forced the pastor to come up on stage but he fled from the area and went straight to the police station. “However, the Buddhist monks pursued him to the police station,” reported NCEASL, “and falsely accused him of taking pictures and videos of the meeting. The pastor denied the allegations to the Officer in Charge (OIC).” 

As the AOG pastor was fleeing from the Ravana Balaya Buddhist monks, a Methodist church in Batticaloa District was raided on the morning of June 16. The congregation was holding a worship service when the attackers barged in and started shouting at the pastor and church members. Armed with clubs, knives, and swords, the attackers demanded for the on-going service to stop and for the church to be closed down permanently. “They beat up the worshippers and the pastor causing injury,” wrote NCEASL in its June 2013 Incident Report. “Some of the injured victims were admitted to the Valachchenai hospital. The mob further caused serious damage to the modest church building.” 

The next day, on June 17, another pastor in the same district was attacked at around 9:00 a.m. Five Buddhist monks and some 30 locals surrounded the pastor’s place and hurled threats at him. “They demanded that the worship services be discontinued,” said NCEASL. “The presence of the police prevented the attackers from entering the (pastor’s) premises. The police succeeded in sending the mob away.” The assaulted pastor continues to receive threats almost on a daily basis. 

 NCEASL has documented 45 incidents of religious persecution between January and May this year, a steep increase from 2012’s total count of 52. 

Father, our concerns are that the persecution of Christians may be on the rise. Often we do not know how to pray for those who are directly affected; help us to pray “according to Your will” so that our hearts are in harmony with Yours. Today Father, we join in prayer with believers in Sri Lanka who are facing threats and aggression because they have put their trust in You. Carry them, sustain them and strengthen them in such a way, that it will be obvious to those who intend harm, will see Your love, grace and hope. May many come into the kingdom because of their faithful witness. In Jesus’ name, the great “I Am,” we pray. Amen 

COURTESY:OPEN DOORS /DBS

On Banned Time Magazine’s “Buddhist Terror” Issue

On Banned Time Magazine’s “Buddhist Terror” Issue


Colombo TelegraphHatred is never appeased by hatred in this world; by non-hatred only is hatred appeased. This is an unending truth. — Dhammapada, 5
The July 1st international edition of Timemagazine has added fuel to the fire with a cover photo of the fundamentalist Burmese monk Wirathu, calling him “The Face of Buddhist Terror.”
Read more in the religiondispatches.org
Related stories;
By ALAN SENAUKE-July 2, 2013
  • Time's controversial cover story on Burma's radical monk and his movement
  • .
  • Return to Religion Dispatches Home
    Hatred is never appeased by hatred in this world; by non-hatred only is hatred appeased. This is an unending truth.
    — Dhammapada, 5
    Harsh voices of intolerance have become almost daily news from Burma.
    The July 1st international edition of Timemagazine has added fuel to the fire with a cover photo of the fundamentalist Burmese monk Wirathu, calling him “The Face of Buddhist Terror.”

Gotabhaya open on demographic genocide

Gotabhaya open on demographic genocide

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 03 July 2013, 18:03 GMT]
Genocidal Sri Lanka’s presidential sibling Gotabhaya Rajapaksa on Tuesday openly admitted that the Sinhala State’s intention is not giving even provinces to Tamils, but to proceed with demographic genocide to erase out their territorial identity, when he said “alienation of provinces based on ethnicity” was not the solution. What Gotabhaya said was also the thrust of the LLRC report that was internationally legitimised as the basis for solutions in the island by the Washington-initiated and New Delhi-fine tuned resolutions at Geneva. It is increasingly transparent that the Sinhala State’s open boldness, in committing genocide in war and in continuing structural genocide in all its facets, actually stems from a collective agenda of the USA and India, said Tamils for alternative politics in the island. 

If China is the reason for the USA and India protecting the genocidal Sinhala State, whether the latter two tell that the genocide will only be complete unless the global Tamils prove themselves a worse threat to the US-Indian interests than the Sinhala State harping on China, the activists for alternative politics asked.

At this juncture much depends on the global Tamils, especially the Tamils in Tamil Nadu, telling these two Establishments to their faces that they would not be ‘engineered’ by the impotency of the two in coursing towards the completion of the annihilation of the nation of Eezham Tamils, the activists in the island said.

If Washington and New Delhi think that what the Sinhala State is doing is the future model for humanity to resolve issues as such of the nation of Eezham Tamils, then the edification of them is the responsibility of entire humanity, the activists said.

Organisations such as the Amnesty International and certain international media that try to project what the genocidal Sinhala State is doing as merely a general human rights issue for the entire island, are in fact subtly shielding the genocide, protecting the genocidal integrity of the State, detracting liberation and are committing a heinous crime against the norms of entire humanity. Tamils have to first wage their struggle against such international fakes, the activists further said.

On Tuesday, Gotabhaya, the defence Secretary of the genocidal State said that Sri Lanka should not listen to India on the implementation of the 13th Amendment. He was harping on a ’homegrown’ solution.

It is explicitly known in the last more than four years that the homegrown solution is Sinhala militarisation, colonisation, Sinhalicisation, Buddhicisation, and demographic cum structural genocide of the nation of Eezham Tamils.

“If there is a problem it should only be solved by Sri Lankans and not India,” the presidential sibling deservingly thrashed on the face of Washington and New Delhi that had mobilised 30 to 40 sheep in the name of governments to help the Sinhala state quenching its genocidal blood thirst. 

But Gotabhaya was confident: “This should not be an issue to strain our relationship, and I’m of the view that India understands that,” Gotabhaya was cited saying by Colombo’s Daily Mirror on Tuesday.

Of course, from Natchiappan of the Sonia Congress to Swapan Dasgupta of the BJP-RSS-Shiv Sena lot and from the Chennai-based The Hindu to the Mumbai-based Times group, there are many in India prepared to show generous understanding towards the genocidal State, commented activists for alternative politics in the island.

The Spirit Of Giving

The Spirit Of Giving

By Arjuna Seneviratne -July 4, 2013 
Arjuna Seneviratne
Colombo TelegraphA view according to the truth of the Buddha goes like this: “දාà¶± à¶´්‍රධාà¶±ියා දාà¶± à¶½ාà¶¶ියා එම දානය à¶šෙà·ƒේ à¶´à¶»ිහරණය à¶šà¶»à¶ºිද යන්à¶± à¶±ොà·ƒිà¶­ිය යුà¶­ුය” (A giver should never attempt to determine how a receiver uses that gift). Similar sentiments were expressed by  Lord Jesus Christ, the Prophet Mohamed (P.B.U.H.) and Lord Shiva. Indeed! If something is truly to be a gift, then the owner’s ties to it should be severed the moment it is released from his or her  hand. If it doesn’t, then, to all intents and purposes, that gift was never given.
Sri Lankans may have have many faults but in this aspect of giving, we show two traits that are, simultaneously and paradoxically, both gorgeously real and beautifully transcendental in nature.
Watch this small clip I made of an excerpt of Kahlil’s beautiful message to mankind:
*Arjuna Seneviratne’s can be found at http://arjunareflections.blogspot.co.uk

Channel 4 Director arrested in Malaysia

Channel 4 Director arrested in Malaysia
By Staff reporter


2013-07-04 
British television Channel- 4 director Callum Macray who produced No Fire Zone killing Fields was arrested by 20 immigration officials, 20 Home Ministry officials along with 20 police officials in Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday 3 July for screening his documentary on the final phase of the war between the LTTE and the Security Forces in Wanni.


According to sources Callum Macray was arrested while he was showing the film to a private audience in Kualalumpur .


Police officials in Kualalumpur are investigating further on the background of the screening of the channel -4 documentary on Sri Lanka’s last lap of the war sources said. (Ceylon Today Online)

Organisers detained for screening controversial documentary on Tamils in Sri Lanka

Organisers detained for screening controversial documentary on Tamils in Sri Lanka

The Star OnlineBY NICHOLAS CHENG-Thursday July 4, 2013 

KUALA LUMPUR: Three organisers of a controversial documentary film screening at the KL/Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall were detained by Home Ministry, Immigration and police officials here Wednesday.

The screening of the movie, No Fire Zone, which explores the oppression of Tamils in Sri Lanka, was organised by human rights group Pusat Komas.

Programme coordinator Lena Hendry said the officers entered the hall after the movie had finished at around 8.30pm.

She said Immigration officers also forced around 150 attendees to flash their MyKads for identification and also riffled through a bag belonging to a journalist.

"Yesterday, Chinese Assembly Hall owners were contacted by Sri Lankan High Commission officials.

"They said the facts of the film were not right and urged them to stop the screening.

"We tried to fix an appointment with them to discuss it and even invited it to the screening. They said they would meet us today evening but never showed up," Lena claimed.

She said the officers arrived around 8.10pm and tried to enter the premises as organisers attempted to negotiate with them.

"I don't want to say the High Commission was involved in this but the recent events leading to this raises questions," she said.

Those detained were taken to the Dang Wangi police station to have their statement recorded.

Home Ministry and Immigration officials present at the scene refused comment.

However, when contacted, Dang Wangi deputy OCPD Supt Nor Azman Muhammad Yusof denied that police were involved in the operation.

"Refer to the other authorities on this matter. We are not a part of it whatsoever," he said.

A financial analyst who who was at the screening said authorities asked the audience to flash their MyKads several times but did not jot down any particulars.

"Honestly, I think they really have no right to do that and they didn't even give any reasons for it," she said.

Buddha statue forcibly placed in playground of Muslim school in Batticaloa

Buddha statue forcibly placed in playground of Muslim school in Batticaloa

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 02 July 2013, 21:17 GMT]
Muslims of Oaddamaavadi village in Batticaloa were shocked on Monday early morning this week when they saw a Buddha statue placed on a table in the middle of the playground of Pi'rainthu'raich-chenai Ashar Viththiyaalayam in Vaazhaich-cheanai. Oaddamavadi is a Muslim dominated town, located 32 km north of Batticaloa city. The playground is located close to Buddha Jayanthi Vihara in Vaazhaich-cheanai. The head of the Buddhist vihara had attempted to seize the playground from the school in 2010. 

The School Development Society (SDS) of the Ashar school immediately lodged a complaint with the Vaazhaich-cheanai police stating that the statue had been placed in the middle of the playground of the school as act of provocation against the Muslims.

Pi'rainthu'raich-chenai Ashar Vidiyalayam is using the playground for the last thirty years holding sports meets and cultural activities, the SDS sources said. 

Three years ago, on March 01, 2010, the head of the Buddha Jayanthi Vihara forcibly demolished the boundary wall between the playground and the vihara. 

The head of the Buddhist vihara had also warned the school staff and students not to enter the land that he claimed as the property of the vihara. However, the SDS moved the matter to the District Court, which ruled that the said land belonged to the school as its playground.

Sri Lanka Is The 9th Most Dangerous Country In The World

Sri Lanka Is The 9th Most Dangerous Country In The World


Colombo TelegraphJuly 4, 2013 |
Using data from the Geneva Declaration’s latest report, London based Action on Armed Violence (AOAV) infographic reveals surprising facts about the global burden of armed violence. Half a million people die violent deaths every year, but only one in 10 are killed in conflict zones, according to the infographic released June 25, 2013.  El Salvador is the most dangerous country in the world, followed by Iraq. Sri Lanka is listed as the nineth most dangerous country.
The Global Burden of Armed Violence reports, released in 2008 and 2011, take an integrated approach to the complex and volatile dynamics of armed violence around the world, bringing into sharp focus the wide-ranging costs of conflict and crime on development.

Can a two-thirds majority determine moral rectitude?

Can a two-thirds majority determine moral rectitude?


article_image

By Sarath De Alwis- 

"Leaders who have been lucky are never punished for having taken too much risk. Instead they are believed to have had the flair and foresight to anticipate success and the sensible people who doubted them are seen in hindsight as mediocre, timid and weak. A few lucky gambles can crown a reckless leader with halo of prescience and boldness."

Geo-Political Reality Bites

Geo-Political Reality Bites


By Dharisha Bastians -July 4, 2013 
Dharisha Bastians
Colombo TelegraphLate last week, increasingly influential hardline groups in the country rallied against the internationally-acclaimed TIME Magazine for its cover story featuring controversial Burmese monk Wirathu, whose 969 movement has been accused of provoking major anti-Muslim sentiment in Myanmar that has been rocked by riots and the deliberate targeting of Muslim communities in the predominantly Buddhist nation.
Wirathu’s rhetoric, calling on Buddhist Burmese citizens to boycott Muslim-owned shops and businesses and seeking legislation to restrict women from marrying Muslim men, finds resonance in the Islamophobia whipped up by political Buddhist groups operating freely in Sri Lanka, prompting hardliners in this country to spring to the defence of Wirathu being branded by TIME Magazine as the ‘Face of Buddhist Terror’.

‘The Invention Of The Jewish People’

‘The Invention Of The Jewish People’

Shlomo Sand, ‘The Invention Of The Jewish People’
Collective identity needs a misty image of an ancient biological common origin (Sand, 280).
In Sri Lanka, ‘identity’ contains a very distinctive blend of ethno-nationalism with traditional religion where religion becomes an instrument serving political ends (Sand, 285-6).
Shlomo Sand, Professor of History at Tel Aviv University, wrote this work (hereafter, ‘Invention’) in Hebrew for a Jewish readership, and then translated it into English. (Page reference is to the paperback edition, London, 2010.) It is as if a Sinhalese 

Can The TNA’s Decision To Boycott The PSC Be Justified?

Can The TNA’s Decision To Boycott The PSC Be Justified?


By Sumanasiri Liyanage -July 4, 2013 
Sumanasiri Liyanage
Colombo TelegraphWe all are witnessing in Sri Lanka another proof of the Hegelian axiom that history repeats itself. Anticipating Jacques Derrida’s introduction of the notion of iteration in to the philosophy of language, Marx added history proceeds first time as a tragedy and second as a farce. If the repletion goes on farce would become more and more hilarious. In the past, there had been many Parliamentary Select Committees (PSCs), All Party Representative Committees (APRCs) on national question to make recommendation as to how the grievances and aspirations of numerically small nations and ethnic groups in Sri Lanka be accommodated into the constitutional and political power structure of the country. It is interesting to note although these committees came up with constructive recommendations, the governments so far have failed to adopt them for multiple reasons. In this respect, the recommendations of the Mangala Moonesinghe PSC that was supported by two main Sinhala parties, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the United National Party (UNP) and the APRC headed by Prof Tissa Vitharana should be especially mentioned. Undoubtedly, it was a tragedy that no serious actions were taken to implement these recommendations as they had to some extent questioned the hegemonic notion of politics in post-colonial Sri Lanka. One more PSC was named to recommend necessary changes to the 13th Amendment. External Affairs Minister G L Peiris has waxed eloquent to the diplomatic community about the PSC’s objectives of resolving issues relating to constitutional reform in an “all-inclusive” manner, and the need for a “structured and comprehensive approach” in these matters. Nonetheless, any independent observer would see a notable difference between this PSC and the previous one headed by Mr Mangala Moonesinghe. While previous one tried to accommodate the demands of numerically small nations and ethnic groups by resolving some of the contradictions between the Republican Constitution and the 13th Amendment, the present one is supposed to make recommendations to make Sri Lanka officially and constitutionally mono cultural entity by suppressing the prevailing constitutional rights of other cultures.

New Indian High Commissioner YK Sinha begins his mission in SL

New Indian High Commissioner YK Sinha begins his mission in SL
(Lanka-e-News-03.July.2013, 4.00PM) The High Commissioner of India, H.E. Mr. Y. K. Sinha, presented his credentials to President Mahinda Rajapaksa at 10.45 a.m. today at a ceremony held at the Presidential Secretariat.

Mr. Y.K. Sinha is a seasoned diplomat and during his career of 32 years, has handled several important assignments in Indian diplomatic missions and at the Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi. Before coming to Sri Lanka, he was Additional Secretary (Pakistan-Afghanistan-Iran) at the Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi. He has also served as Ambassador of India to Venezuela, Consul General of India in Dubai and held key positions in Indian missions in New York, Islamabad, Rome, Abu Dhabi and Riyadh. 

Tamil Diaspora Delegation Meets Norwegians To Discuss Military Occupation And Sinhala-Settler Colonialism

Tamil Diaspora Delegation Meets Norwegians To Discuss Military Occupation And Sinhala-Settler Colonialism

Colombo Telegraph
July 4, 2013 
“The end of war does not guarantee peace. The conflict in the island is far from over and violence continues to happen against the Tamil Nation in their homeland. Norway can rectify the mistakes of the peace process by being a strong voice against Sri Lanka’s crimes against the unarmed and defenseless Tamil people.” says the International Council of Eelam Tamils

Whither the Sri Lankan Tamils?

Whither the Sri Lankan Tamils?

A-Tamil-woman-prays-at-a--001
Photo courtesy The Guardian (Rafiq Maqbool/AP)
Groundviews-4 Jul, 2013
I attended the Thanthai Chelvanayakam Memorial lecture entitled “Whither the Sri Lankan Tamils?” given by Justice C. V. Wigneswaran to mark the 36th death anniversary of Mr. S. J. V. Chelvanayakam Q.C., as sponsored by the Ilankai Tamil ArasuKatchi (I.T.A.K.), Colombo District branch on Friday 26th April at the New Kathiresan Hall, Bambalapitiya.  I must admit I came away with a faint sense of déjà vu.

Bleak future for Sri Lanka’s female-headed households

Bleak future for Sri Lanka’s female-headed households

Women need more support to stand on their own
COLOMBO, 26 June 2013 (IRIN) - Four years after the end of a 26-year civil warand with donor assistance dwindling, tens of thousands of female-headed households in northern Sri Lanka face a difficult future, though many are developing innovative coping strategies.

“There is little evidence that the unique vulnerabilities faced by female-h
Seetha Kurubakaran, from the town of Paranthan in Kilinochchi District, said she had tried to seek work in various fields - from construction to the civil service (as a clerk) - but without success. All the jobs she sought went to men. 

Fathers, sons and doors

Fathers, sons and doors


 July 3, 2013, 12:00 pm
One of our young cricketers has become internationally known overnight—for the wrong reason though. He tried to open the door of a British airways plane in mid-air while looking for a toilet the other day. Sri Lanka Cricket, which usually has egg on its face by trying to sweep things under the carpet, promptly identified him as Ramith, son of Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella.

Ramith’s father who is busy preparing a code of ethics for journalists also had a problem with a closed door of a hotel room down under some time ago. Unable to open the rear door which got locked, shutting him out on a balcony, he tried to creep into his room through a window and had a nasty fall in the process. Having learnt a bitter lesson, he must have advised his son to be wary of taking chances if a door happened to be closed and to keep tugging at its handle until it opened or help arrived. The boy desperate to get into a toilet must have remembered his father’s advice and did as had been told, even at an altitude of 35,000 feet! An epitome of obedience, eh?

Detractors of our patriotic government politicians may try to make an issue of the allegation that the player had had one too many and did not know what he was doing. However, if that is the case then the blame should go to Britain, which keeps castigating the Sri Lankan government without adopting the latter’s good policies such as Mathata Thitha, which has helped this country put the kibosh on alcohol abuse. Fully rehabilitated and sober, all former Sri Lankan drunkards now eagerly await the monthly Dhamma talk telecast live from Temple Trees; liquor outlets have gone out of business and bars are deserted.

The youthful cricketer had been allegedly bending his elbow prior to taking off owing to the moral decadence in Britain, where governments have been issuing too many liquor licences unlike ours. He has apparently been a victim of the alcohol policy of the neo-imperialist forces. When the heads of the Commonwealth gather here in November, let them be educated on our Mathata Thitha programme!

The section of the aircraft where the toilet in question was located was dimly lit and our cricketer looked disoriented with his headphones on, according to other passengers. The plot thickens! Why wasn’t that area properly lit? Who fixed the cabin door close to the toilet? Who manufactured those headphones which made the young man deaf to frantic warnings from the alarmed passengers and the cabin crew? These are some of the questions that we ought to ask ourselves as citizens of a country ruled by the descendants of King Kekille, the legendary bovine monarch.

Thus, it may be seen that the possibility of a foreign conspiracy to discredit Sri Lanka cannot be ruled out! The innocent player may have been lured into imbibing BRITISH liquor and boarding a BRITISH aircraft with the cabin door in the wrong place so as to cause him to make a spectacle of himself and bring the patriotic Sri Lankan government into disrepute. Doesn’t this argument sound convincing?

It behoves us to take precautions to ensure the safety of our beloved cricketers. We suggest that when they go overseas hereafter they be accompanied by nannies so that they won’t have to worry about toilets. After all, ours is a nanny state, isn’t it? Another solution which is a bit too expensive is to charter planes for national cricketers and keep their toilet doors wide open during the entire flight. We don’t want any of our cricketing heroes to open the wrong door and go skydiving without parachutes at 35,000 ft. do we?

Ramith has told this newspaper that he is somnambulist and he may have tried to open the aircraft door in his sleep. He has surpassed his ministerial father in style and is sure to do well in politics. We hope and pray that he won’t fall asleep on the field and start playing ‘sleep cricket’! King Kekille must be guffawing in his grave.

Cheers!