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

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

waiting for the war to end

Add caption
Groundviews

In this place there are
No trees no
old house
With the rope swing
Between the karatha kolombang
Trees
Here there is only
White heat white-brown sand
Four tin walls
And a tin roof.
It is better than
the camp
At least we don’t have to queue up
For the lavatory.
But for me
The war is not over
Even though they are celebrating
Victory Day in this
strange deserted place.
The war will end
only when
I can go back
To that childhood home,
when our daughter starts
to speak again.
And you come home
to me.
Poem by Vivimarie VanderPoorten. All photos by Sharni Jayawardena.

Controversy over Canadian statement:High Commissioner Whiting told vanquished were terrorists


article_image
by Shamindra Ferdinando-

The External Affairs Ministry has summoned Canadian High Commissioner, Shelley Whiting over her recent public call to do away with the annual Victory Day parade as it was inimical to post-war reconciliation efforts.

Government sources told The Island that High Commissioner Whiting was told that her position was unacceptable. The government strongly objected to what a senior official called an attempt on the Canadian envoy’s part to misinterpret the annual celebrations.

High Commissioner Whiting in an exclusive statement to The Island in the run-up to the victory day parade said that Sri Lanka should stop the annual event as it perpetuated roles of victors and vanquished within the country. She called for a day of remembrance for all those who suffered as a result of the conflict.

The Canadian envoy pointed out that the government had deprived Tamil speaking people of an opportunity to commemorate the war dead.

The External Affairs Ministry pointed out that public commemoration of terrorists couldn’t be allowed, though there was absolutely no prohibition of having commemorative ceremonies privately. Referring to her statement, the Canadian diplomat was told that victors were the people of Sri Lanka and terrorists were the vanquished. The government took up the position that Canadian action was contrary to what it called constructive engagement.

The envoy was told that she could have simply informed the government of her decision not to attend without making a public statement.

The High Commissioner was also asked whether Canada would permit the commemoration of the killing of unarmed Al Qaeda leader, Osama bin laden.

Addressing the nation at the military parade, President Mahinda Rajapaksa pledged that his government would continue with annual military parade.

Meanwhile, a senior official told The Island that Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister, John Baird and Minister of State Lynne Yelich on April 30 declared that Canada wouldn’t recognise recent measures taken by the Sri Lankan government targeting 16 organisations and 424 individuals. In spite of the LTTE being on top of the listed organisations, the Canadian Foreign Minister had cleared all 16 including the LTTE, he said. Responding to a query, he said, "We may have to seek a clarification."

Baird and Yelich said: "We are concerned by the Government of Sri Lanka’s listing of 16 entities and 424 individuals for purported links to terrorist activities, including some with ties to Canada. Sri Lanka’s action has no legal effect in Canada: It does not constrain the freedom of listed groups and individuals to lawfully express their views in Canada."

Son departs in search of mother Sunila

sanjaya senanayekeWe inform our readers with heartfelt grief that Sanjaya Senanayake, the only son of comrade Sunila Abeysekara who had departed us a few a months ago, and Kelly Senanayake, passed away this morning (21).
Sanjaya, who had been tempered by the experiences of his parents, was a television editor by profession. Also following the footsteps of his late mother, he had served as a frontline human rights activist. Until his last moment, Sanjaya tried to rescue Mother Lanka, who is seriously ailing with chauvinism and religious extremism.
We do not wish that Sanjaya and Sunila attain Nibbana. We request in brotherhood that they return soon and resume the struggle from where they had stopped.
‘Why do sweet smelling flowers wilt so soon….?’

Indian Corporate To Build Houses For Gotabhaya’s Colombo Development

by TamilNet
( May 21, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Timed to the Indian election results, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa-controlled Urban Development Authority of Colombo has made an unconventional deal with a leading corporate house of India, the Tata Group, by giving a prime area of Colombo city on a 99 years lease ‘free of charge’, for the group to ‘build houses’.
Suspect in Kurunegala constable murder liquidated to suppress Basil and Lansa’s links with him
(Lanka-e-News- 20.May.2014, 11.30PM) The suspect Kahandawala Arachchige Tharuka Nilan who was arrested on the 18 th was killed within a few hours by the police in order to conceal the secret criminal links he had with the Rajapakses and before those could get exposed . The deceased was taken into custody in connection with the abduction of two police officers who were on duty at Gettuwana junction , and the murder of one of them , according to reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division.

When Tharuka was arrested , the latter had immediately said , he wanted to speak to Basil Rajapakse. In his mobile phone , a most confidential telephone number of Basil had been there. However when Basil and Gotabaya were contacted in this regard by the CID, the latter had been instructed by them to ‘gahalla dhaapan’ (finish him off). 

Accordingly within hours the suspect was taken to the Kalugala Mukulana jungle in Rangala police division and liquidated.
The most intriguing part of this killing is , at least the other police officer , Ajith Weerasuriya who escaped death on the day of the incident could have been able to identify the suspect , but this identification was not done , and the suspect was hurriedly killed even before that for obvious reasons.

What’s more ? even a statement of the suspect who was arrested had not been recorded. In fact the police of the division had been in the dark over this arrest and murder. This ghastly murder of the suspect and the laying the groundwork for it had been done by the CID.

Tharuka who was arrested is one of the six members of an underworld gang who have been used by the politicos very closely associated with the Rajapakses, to commit crimes at their behest during elections.

Tharuka had last served the Rajapakse criminal agendas when he took part in the election campaign of Negombo Lansa , who is mollycoddled by the Rajapakses and is their pet heroin dealer. Lansa had provided a secured house at Mugalla , Katana and provided all the comforts and protection in order to these underworld criminals to accomplish his own illegal and most infernal objectives. On some occasions they have even acted as Lansa’s bodyguards. Basil had also chosen Tharuka and his gang for his criminal activities.

Among the weapons given to this gang were , an automatic 84 S firearm and two T 56 weapons. Since this gang had been enjoying full patronage and protection from Basil and Lansa , they have committed robberies with impunity in Negombo, Nittambuwa and Minuwangoda . During the period of Wayambe elections too , this underworld group and Tharuka had been included in the gang of goons of a candidate - a Rajapakse son pampered by Rajapakses . They have therefore been roaming threateningly everywhere in Kurunegala.

Other underworld members of Tharuka’s gang were Gandara Rohitha and Akuressa Niluka alias Rathnapriya alias army Niluka .In all probability these members will also in the end suffer the same fate of Tharuka , because their secret links with the Rajapakses have come to light . 

Rajapakse’s police spokesman even prior to the arrest of Tharuka concocted fairy tales : the two police officers were having liquor inside the van with the murderers , and it was just an issue involving women. Now after killing the suspected assassin , an entirely different story is being circulated.

The Rajapakses’ police spokesman now says, the CID shot down the suspect involved in the police officer assassination , when the suspect tried to hurl two hand bombs at the CID ,that were hidden at a place at Ududambara , Kalugala , when the CID took him to show to them the hidden firearm matching the cartridge casing that was wrested from the suspect by the other police officer who grappled with the suspects and managed to escape death on the day of the tragedy .

The magistrate too had camouflaged the investigation and concluded even without visiting the scene of killing , that it is in self defense the murder had been committed. In other words the entire inquiry is a sham and absolutely illegal.

There may be no objections from within the police to the killing of an underworld criminal after taking him to a place to discover where the weapon is hidden , but in this instance , the police rank and file are in bitter resentment over the killing of this suspect clandestinely and the attempt to hush it up from the police force itself , in a grave case where the suspect had murdered a police officer which is a serious crime. Moreover , it is to be noted, a statement had not even been recorded of this suspect who was killed. 


Editorial-


The police make no serious effort to prevent crime. They wake from their slumber only after criminals strike. The conviction rate remains as low as four percent. Gun-toting political parasites run amok in public with impunity. So much for the efficiency of the guardians of the law!

But, the police swing into action when undergrads and workers take to the streets. Student protests have, no doubt, become a public nuisance. It is the ordinary public, especially those dependent on public transport, who suffer most when some roads get closed owing to student agitations. However, protesting students must not be treated like criminals while killers, rapists and armed robbers are handled gently.

Several students taken into custody for defying a court order to hold a protest against a controversial reduction in the duration of the Allied Health Sciences (AHS) degree programme were bailed out on Monday. Some of them had been badly roughed up. Censuring the police for the manner in which the suspects had been treated, the court is reported to have said it will not issue orders banning student protests in the future. What else could the judiciary do when its orders are grossly abused by the so-called guardians of the law to unleash brutal force against student protesters?

One of the injured students’ mothers was shown on television breaking down in tears and demanding to know from the powers that be whether it was wrong for her son to protest against the pruning of the duration of his degree course. She warned that the parents of protesting students, too, would be compelled to take to the streets unless justice was done. It behoves the government politicians who do everything in their power to ensure the safety and happiness of their progeny to refrain from harming others’ children.

Undergrads must not allow their protests to be turned into political circuses much to the inconvenience of the public. But, the government must take the blame for violating their rights and creating situations where bankrupt external political forces could tap student unrest to fuel their sinister political projects. If it had solved the AHS students’ problem without causing their protests to spill over into the streets, a crackdown could have been avoided. The issue has been totally mishandled.

AHS students are accused of intransigence because they have refused to agree to a ‘compromise solution’ that the AHS students who qualify for specialising will be allowed to follow a four-year degree course. But, students’ contention is that the original course duration should be retained.

Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake has said he is with the students in this instance, but his ministry is helpless because it has to act according to a court ruling that all stakeholders including the Government Medical Officers’ Association get together and sort out the issue. The doctors are opposed to a four-year AHS degree, he says. Let Minster Dissanayake be urged to stop running with the hare and hunting with the hounds. He is trying to wash his hands of the issue by directing the students’ anger at the doctors.

The police must not be allowed to assault undergrads engaged in protests on the pretext of carrying out court orders. They, we repeat, must stop treating students like criminals.

By provoking students into staging street protests and then ordering crackdowns the government is only helping further the cause of ultra radical political elements bent on disrupting universities.

It is high time someone explored the possibility of invoking the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court again to solve the AHS issue. There does not seem to be any other way to get students out of harm’s way.
Sri Lanka, South Asia’s centre for drug trade 


By Skandha Gunasekara and Mirudhula Thambiah-May 21, 2014  
 

The United National Party (UNP) backed No-Confidence Motion against the government was taken up for discussion yesterday in Parliament by UNP MP and former Speaker, Joseph Michael Perera.

Perera said, the basis behind the motion was that Sri Lanka was turning into a focal point for the distribution of narcotics such as heroin to the rest of South Asia.

He said police investigations conducted by the intelligence services in Afghanistan, Pakistan and India have revealed that heroin produced in Afghanistan is brought to Pakistan and India and then directed to Sri Lanka, making it the focal point for distribution. As a result, he said, the UNP believes the government has lost its ability to secure and promote the wellbeing of its citizens. UNP MP Ravi Karunanayake, who seconded the motion, alleged that Kumaran Pathmanathan (KP), wanted by Interpol for the assassination of Indian Premier Rajiv Gandhi and reported to be involved in drug smuggling, is residing in Sri Lanka under the government’s protection.
He also said KP is being used by the government, allegedly as the main go-between to smuggle narcotics into the country.

At this point, Chief Government Whip Dinesh Gunawardena objected, saying that certain countries which have friendly relations with Sri Lanka, such as Afghanistan, Pakistan and India were mentioned during the motion and that friendly countries should not be spoken of in an unfriendly or hostile manner.
In response, Karunanayake said a measure Sri Lanka can take to strengthen its ties with countries such as India would be to hand over international criminal Pathmanathan to the Indian authorities.

Leader of the House, Nimal Siripala de Silva, who spoke next during yesterday’s debate said the Opposition is attempting to embarrass the government by insulting the motherland.
"Sri Lanka does not produce heroin. So, on what basis is the Opposition alleging that Sri Lanka is the focal point for drug distribution in South Asia? The Opposition is attempting to sling mud at the government by insulting our motherland."

Minister of National Languages and Social Integration, Vasudeva Nanayakkara, who also spoke at the debate said the government is not against the motion to curtail the drug trade in Sri Lanka.
"We are not against curtailing the drug trade in Sri Lanka. We welcome the motion to eradicate this illegal trade. However, we are against the fact that the motion seeks to show no-confidence in the government," said Nanayakkara.

He said that between 2012 and 2013 drug raids carried out in the country increased by 16%. The minister further said among SAARC countries, Sri Lanka’s Narcotics Bureau is the leading organization that is fighting the illegal drugs trade.
JVP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake (MP) in his speech said the JVP supported the no-confidence motion and that they would vote for the motion.

TNA MP Mavai Senathirajah said that his party too would support the motion against the government adding that other than the drug trafficking issue, matters such as land and problems faced in the North should also be spoken about during the debate.
The debate is to continue today where a vote on the no-confidence motion would be taken.

Can The Establishment Win Over Modi


Mahinda Raja -colombotelegraph
By R.M.B Senanayake -May 21, 2014
Colombo Telegraph
R.M.B. Senanayake
R.M.B. Senanayake
Deception and Intrigue have been traditional instruments of foreign policy in the Kautilya tradition which have been used by our rulers in the past. It was successfully used to oust the Portuguese. It was also used against the Dutch to dampen their enthusiasm for conquest. It was used less successfully against the British who  after their early experiences with the Sinhala Establishment did not trust anybody. In the 1980s, President J.R Jayewardene played on the inherent prejudices of the Nehru family, the Delhi bureaucratic establishment committed to the unity of India and the Brahmin lobby in the South, to dampen India’s championship of the Tamils. The LTTE leader Prabakaran was not enamoured of the sentiments of the Nehru family and looked with disfavor upon their efforts to browbeat them.  So he did not trust the Indian ruling Brahmin regime. President Premadasa continued the deceptive policies, paying lip service to the need to remedy Tamil grievances while deceptively undermining the devolution of power under the 13h Amendment. President CBK was perhaps less deceptive but she too was not really committed to resolving the Tamil grievances except where she could also enhance her own self interest.               Read More

A response to the critiques of the victory celebrations

I would ask them to stop a moment, to take the time to listen to our time (we had no other one)…” – Jacques Derrida: text delivered at Althusser’s funeral
Groundviews
>

Who’ll Be Modi’s Point Man To Take Decisions On Sri Lanka?


by Upul Joseph Fernando
( May 21, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The way the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime thinks about India’s new Prime Minister is different. They estimate that Narendra Modi may take about a year to consolidate power at the centre. By that time he would not have time to focus on Sri Lanka and other regional issues, or so they think. They also think that Modi may not support the US agenda on Sri Lanka since he himself had no good relations with the US when he was Gujarat’s Chief Minister.
Modi is not that exposed to international politics and therefore he may not interfere in regional issues since he may focus on the internal politics of India, the Rajapaksa regime thinks.
Last minute decision

However, when considering the Congress Government’s last minute decision to ban the LTTE for five more years in India, it seems that the former Government of India has certain doubts as to whether Modi may change India’s Sri Lanka policy. Congress might have thought that a Modi Government could follow a loose policy on the LTTE. Sri Lanka also banned pro-LTTE Tamil Diaspora organizations during the last period of the Congress Government. India implemented this ban unofficially for five years, although Western countries including Canada did not accept it.
The announcement by the Indian Government of imposing a five-year ban on the LTTE carried the message that pro-LTTE Tamil Diaspora members may enter Tamil Nadu and mobilize people against the Central Government. India voted in favour of the resolutions mooted at the UNHRC in 2012 and 2013, but abstained from voting this year. The reason may be to prevent a future government led by Modi supporting an international probe against Sri Lanka.
All these indicate that Congress had understood that Modi might have a different approach towards Sri Lanka. India’s former Defence Adviser, Shivshankar Menon, decided on Indian policy on Sri Lanka. Menon is a close friend of the Rajapaksas. Today, the Rajapaksas are waiting to see who will be appointed as India’s new National Security Adviser under the BJP Government. Rajapaksas seem to think that the National Security Adviser will be the person deciding policies on Sri Lanka in the context that Modi may take a year to consolidate power in New Delhi.
Several names have been proposed as the National Security Adviser under the Modi Government. One of them is Ajith Kumar Doval who was the Director, Intelligence Bureau under the Vajpayee Government. Another nominee is Kanwal Sibal, who was the Foreign Secretary under Vajpayee. Yet another name touted is S. Jaishankar, Political Secretary, Indian High Commission in Sri Lanka during the 1988-89 period. He advised the IPKF in Sri Lanka at that time. His father, K. Subramaniam was also a defence expert.
Meanwhile, the fourth name touted for the post of National Security Adviser is Shyam Saran. Saran was appointed Foreign Secretary in June 2004 and visited Sri Lanka in July 2006. He instructed President Rajapaksa to provide a political solution to the North. However, he resigned from the post before Rajapaksa began the war in September 2006. Saran visited Sri Lanka in 2011 to deliver a lecture on India-Sri Lanka relations.

Puri factor
However, the most crucial name proposed for the post of National Security Adviser is Hardeep Puri, who served at the Indian High Commission of Sri Lanka during the period of Indian intervention from 1984 to 1988. He was also the Permanent Representative of India at the UN from 2009 to 2013. Later, he changed his allegiance to the BJP. Puri was the person who made the controversial statement urging for an international probe on crimes during the last days of war in Sri Lanka.
Puri recently said, “India can be against the LTTE, but cannot afford to be against the Tamils. The problem, both amongst the Tamil minority in Sri Lanka and large sections of the Tamil population in India is that the LTTE successfully manipulated Tamil opinion by projecting itself as the only physical shield against Sinhala repression. We cannot wish away this sentiment. The only safeguard for the Tamils in Sri Lanka is delivery of the promised devolution based on the 13th Amendment.
"Both the AIADMK and the DMK, along with smaller parties in Tamil Nadu are on the same page on the Sri Lanka issue. The problem will continue to fester till Colombo has a genuine change of heart. Recent signals are anything but encouraging. Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said on 27 March 2013: ‘Could we afford to have a provincial administration here, which pointed a gun at the national leadership at the drop of a hat? We don’t want to be at the mercy of scheming provincial administrations.’ Let alone the 13th Amendment, the Defence Secretary seems to be suggesting the winding up of Provincial Councils altogether!
"Notwithstanding assurances to India, the ‘brothers’ running Sri Lanka appear to have no intention to move on political reconciliation and devolution. This ‘majoritarianism’ in total disregard of respecting and protecting the rights of minorities is a narrow and calibrated political strategy designed to safeguard Sinhalese parliamentary strength. Recent attacks on the Muslim trading community in the heart of Colombo by fanatical Sinhalese, allegedly led by Buddhist monks are manifestations of similar callous and cynical disregard for the rights of linguistic, religious and cultural minorities. India did the right thing by supporting the resolution on war crimes.
"Exaggerated projections of Chinese inroads and influence are a bogey, which many of our smaller neighbours periodically try on us. Apart from being practical, the Chinese are also hard headed. They will pursue economic and commercial opportunities irrespective of the way India votes. Support for Sri Lanka up to 2012 did not prevent them from looking for commercial projects there. Many Chinese successes have something to do with our own inability to deliver commercial projects on time."
Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, angered by this, made the following statement. “Had the then Indian Government acted with responsibility, Sri Lanka wouldn’t have experienced a 30-year war.
"People of all communities would have been still suffering horrors of war, if not for the eradication of terrorism in May 2009, following a three-year combined Security Forces campaign. India could never absolve itself of the responsibility for creating terrorism here, though some of those directly involved in subverting Sri Lanka were blaming the Rajapaksa administration for the plight of Tamil speaking people here."
In this context, it may not be easy for the Rajapaksas if Puri is appointed as the Adviser on National Security by Prime Minister Modi.
'Ace of Hearts'
During the election, the Rajapaksa Government of Sri Lanka did two acts that embarrassed India. One is discussing a defence pact with China and the other was consulting Pakistani Legal Expert Chandhry Ahsan on the impact of the resolution against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC. This service was solicited through a special request channelled by President Mahinda Rajapaksa by way of the Prime Minister of Pakistan.
These however didn’t please the Indian Government. This indicates that the Rajapaksa regime is trying to play the same old game of cards showing India the trump of China, thereby aiming to win the government there. It is yet to be seen if the Modi Government also can be tricked with the same China and Pakistan trump cards.

Ranil says at all future elections UNP to stick with elephant symbol -UBF wants Sobhitha Thera for common candidate 

UBF wants Sobhitha Thera for common candidate    
The United Bhikkhu Front (UBF) invited Chief Incumbent of the Kotte Sri Naga Viharaya, Ven. Maduluwawe Sobhitha Thera to contest the upcoming Presidential Election as the common candidate.
The invitation was extended yesterday by Anunayake of the Ramanna Chapter, Girambe Ananda Thera during a media conference.
Ananda Thera, also said, although the UNP or the JVP did not have the strength to contest separately and compete with the present government, a combined effort in producing a common candidate would be successful in achieving victory over a UPFA candidate.

He reiterated that the Executive Presidency was a one-man show that needed to be abolished immediately, in order to have a government led by a Prime Minister that was accountable to the nation and to Parliament.
"Steps must be taken to appoint a common candidate who protects the rights of the Sinhala Buddhists and who also respects other religions equally. Even though the government has expressed displeasure at having Sobhitha Thera as a common candidate, he has worked for the country, the nation and the religion," Ananda Thera said.
He was of the view that all the Executive Presidency had managed to pull off was to use public money to build ports to which ships did not arrive and construct cricket grounds where no matches were played.
"The media cannot raise a voice against the Executive Presidency because if they do so, white vans will start to chase them," he added.

UBF President, Mitiyagoda Gunaratane Thera noted, "Only the JVP opposed casinos. There is no Opposition that can understand the fact that 90% of the country's people are against the incumbent government. If the Opposition can understand this there is no need for a common candidate. Though there is no one to talk about this, the government's lifespan is short."

Bopitiye Dhammissara Thera, Mahamankadawala Piyaratana Thera, Thalpotha Dhammajothi Thera, Karakole Piyadassi Thera and Aththangage Shasanaratana Thera also participated in the press conference held at the National Library Colombo auditorium yesterday.


How The UNP ‘Brand’ Suffered Over The Years


Colombo Telegraph
By Vishwamithra -May 21, 2014
Brand is not a product, that’s for sure; it’s not one item. It’s an idea, it’s a theory, it’s a meaning, it’s how you carry yourself. It’s aspirational, it’s inspirational.” - Kevin Plank
Ranil
Ranil
What is the ‘brand’ of the United National Party (UNP)? How does the average villager identify the Party? With what does he associate the UNP? What comes to mind immediately upon the mention of these three letters, UNP? Have the decision-makers in the UNP paid any attention to these questions? For that matter has any political party in Sri Lanka addressed this issue at all? If a professional approach is adopted, not only in establishing a ‘brand’ for a political party but also in defining its basic parameters, its fundamental message and promise for the easy comprehension and digestion by the customer, the voter’s grappling with the unexpected and its orderly and successful management would be much less problematic and more rewarding.                                                    Read More
Evidence from CCTV above office shows alleged fatal shootings of Nadeem Nawara and Mohammad Salameh by Israeli forces

A Palestinian protester throws a stone during clashes with Israeli security forces outside Ofer prison the day after the two youths were shot dead. Photograph: Abbas Momani/AFP/Getty Images
A Palestinian throws a stone during clashes with Israeli security forces outside Ofer prison

 in Beitunia

Tuesday 20 May 2014New video evidence showing the fatal shooting of two Palestinian teenagers last week strongly indicates that neither of the boys posed a threat to Israeli forces at the time they were targeted, supporting claims they were "unlawfully killed".
Link to video: CCTV footage of Palestinian teenagers being shot dead
  

Climate change in Pakistan: innovation in the absence of government support

Research reveals people in Pakistan have lost confidence in the government's ability to build resilience to climate change

• Climate change: what is your message for global leaders?
A farmer in the Punjab province, Pakistan. Photograph: Erik De Castro/Reuters
A farmer uses a donkey to transport newly harvested wheat grains at a field in Attcak, in Punjab
The Guardian home
Anna Colom-Wednesday 21 May 2014
"There is nothing left here. We don't have electricity, we don't have gas, we have an acute shortage of water, so what is left for us?"
This is how a woman in Lahore, Pakistan, expressed her frustration to researchers for Climate Asia, the largest study in Asia on people's perceptions of changes in climate.
Pakistan stood out from the other countries included in the study – India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Vietnam and China – because of this strong sense of despair. It was the only country of all seven in which more people thought life had become worse in the past five years, both in rural areas and big cities.
Climate Asia, which surveyed more than 4,000 people across the country, found that lack of electricity, not having enough food and not having enough clean water were people's biggest worries. High inflation was also mentioned as putting a lot of pressure on their lives.
And these worries were aggravated by perceived changes in climate and the environment, namely rising temperatures, changes in rainfall patterns, shifts in seasons and saline water intrusion, which people said affected agricultural productivity and access to water. People in Pakistan were noticing these changes over the years despite only a quarter of respondents saying they had heard the term "climate change" before, and despite 15% saying that they had heard the term but did not know what it meant.
In more than any other country surveyed in the region, people in Pakistan thought these changes in weather and in availability of water, food, electricity and fuel, were currently having a high impact on their lives, their lifestyles and health.
Pakistan also stood out for the low confidence people had in national, provincial and local governments taking the necessary actions to help them respond to changes in water, food, energy supply or extreme weather events. More than 70% of people surveyed said that they had little or no confidence in government to help them on these issues.
People in Pakistan had more confidence in their neighbourhoods than in any institution. "The floods have taught us that we need to solve our own problems," one community leader in Badin told us.
Moreover, despite the feeling of despair, people in Pakistan who were responding in one way or another to these challenges were taking a broader range of actions than those surveyed in the other countries, from rotating crops and using renewable energy, to storm-proofing their homes.
But co-operation is not always easy. We carried out community assessments which provided a useful insight on how people worked together to improve their resilience. In the district of Rajanpur (Punjab), we observed three different responses to the challenges, some of which were more successful than others.
One small farming settlement had decided to join forces to overcome the impact of recurrent floods and, despite low financial resources, helped each other in elevating homes to protect families and livestock. Another benefited from resources and training provided by a local non-governmental organisation, which helped them to organise themselves, speeding up post-flood recovery. This settlement displayed a strong sense of confidence in their ability to respond to emergencies such as recurring floods.
However, unlike these two communities, a third group was struggling to work together and felt that power relations which allowed certain farmers to secure more water or favourable crop prices, coupled with increased lack of water and infrastructure, were eroding any sense of community.
One of the most important findings – for Pakistan and the other six countries – was that when people are well informed, they are better able to cope with changing weather.
We found that people were relying on others to learn and share information at the community level, and those who felt well informed were also more likely to be rotating and diversifying crops, saving water and making adjustments to their houses – even those with little money.
With high levels of TV viewership and rising mobile phone use in Pakistan, there are opportunities to provide people across the country with information on coping with resource shortages and seasonal changes on a much bigger scale.
Communication and media can not only provide information at critical times such as SMS alerts during extreme weather, but also help people hold their institutions and leaders to account through discussion shows, and share examples of best practice using, for example, dramas or reality TV challenges.
The Climate Asia findings for Pakistan are at once some of the most worrying and inspiring to emerge. In the absence of government support, some communities are innovating and working together to tackle the threats they face. These responses cover a wide range of actions, such as changing cropping patterns, creating emergency shelters and safe spaces for livestock and storing seeds, trying alternative sources of income or creating community citizen boards to manage publicly funded schemes. If those ideas could be shared on a wider scale, it could go a long way to support some of Asia's most vulnerable communities.
Anna Colom works as a research manager at BBC Media Action. Follow@Anna_Colom on Twitter.