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

Friday, May 23, 2014

Wigneswaran declines Rajapaksa's offer to accompany him to New Delhi

CV Wigneswaran's reply to SL Foreign Minister G.L.Peiries
TamilNetCV Wigneswaran's reply to SL Foreign Minister G.L.Peiries
[TamilNet, Friday, 23 May 2014, 13:11 GMT]
In a letter to SL Minister for External Affairs, G.L.Peiris, the Chief Minister of Northern Provincial Council (NPC) CV Wigneswaran on Friday declined to accept an invitation to him to accompany the SL President Mahinda Rajapaksa to New Delhi to the swearing in of Indian Prime Minister Elect Narendra Modi. "Primarily, because acceptance would indicate that there exists a strong co-operative spirit prevailing between the Centre and the Province, when in fact, the Peoples of the North are engulfed in a climate of fear on account of the continued presence of the Military while the activities of the Northern Provincial Council have been stultified," Mr Wigneswaran said in his reply faxed to SL Minister G.L. Peiris. 

"I would be guilty of facilitating tokenism were I to accept such an invitation. Nevertheless I have already sent my best wishes to the Prime Minister Elect of India through the High Commissioner for India in Sri Lanka," Mr Wigneswaran further said. 

"I have already sent my best wishes to the Prime Minister Elect of India through the High Commissioner for India in Sri Lanka," he further stated adding that he was replying to G.L. Peiris after having considered the request in the company of NPC Board of Ministers. 

‘Race’ And Racism: Sharing Some Thoughts


Colombo TelegraphBy Charles Sarvan -May 24, 2014
Prof. Charles Sarvan
Prof. Charles Sarvan
“Racism” in discourse is a palimpsest written differently to suit varying emotions and agenda. For example, Caryl Phillips’ novel Cambridge and Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children are said to deal, inter alia, with the issue of “racism”. But the “racism” in these novels is different, one based on colour, and the other primarily on religious affiliation, and secondly/secondarily, on notions of “race”. In the West, the phrase “race problem” or “race conflict” invariably signals one based on skin-colour, as if the world consisted of just two “races”: the (so-called) white, and the non-white. I have suggested, tongue-in-cheek, “colourism” for this variety of “racism” as being more precise. Here and in what follows, I draw from an article included in my anthology, ‘Sri Lanka: Literary Essays & Sketches’ (pages 182 – 193).
Benedict Anderson states that though nations exist, there is no scientific definition of a nation. A nation is a cultural artefact with emotional legitimacy; an imagined political community – imagined because not even those who go to make up the smallest of nations will ever know most of their fellow-members, yet in the consciousness of each lives the image of their communion.  Six pages on in the same work (‘Imagined Communities’) Anderson cites Ernest Gellner’s argument that nationalism does not awake nations to self-consciousness: rather, it is a certain kind of consciousness which invents nations. To belong to a state (a legal status implying citizenship, obedience to a particular set of laws etc.) may not have emotional connotations, while a sense of belonging to a nation usually does. An individual living in exile may be a citizen of one country, and yet feel that s/he belongs to, and is a part of, a nation geographically far away. The Kurds, fragmented in different countries, scattered in many European and U.S. centres, are a case in point: emotionally, they belong to a “nation” which they are struggling to bring into existence, to give it an internationally recognized, legal, reality. Much of the foregoing comments on “nation” can be applied to “race”, and the latter term substituted for the former. A certain kind of consciousness invents and thinks in terms of “race”.           Read More

Exposed : Mass Graves In Sri Lanka


New issue of Torture: Asian and Global Perspectives is now available

The Following statement issued by the Asian Human Rights Commission, a regional rights group headquartered in Hong Kong SAR 
( May 23, 2014, Hong Kong , Sri Lanka Guardian) The latest issue of Torture: Asian and Global Perspectiveis now available. In this issue we have exclusive reports on the Mass Graves in Sri Lanka. The report contains full detail of an extensive investigation conducted by the group of Sri Lankan forensic specialists on the case of the Chemmani Mass graves in Jaffna, a former war zone in the Island nation.

The investigative research has been published exclusively, with supported insights and other evidence, provided by reliable sources. This report is our first attempt to reveal the bitter truth of the miserable history of the Island nation which has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives of unarmed civilians in less than four decades. According to reliable sources, there are around 30-40 mass graves in Sri Lanka.

Mass graves in post-independence Sri Lanka were first reported following the 1971 youth uprising led by the Peoples Liberation Front (known locally as JVP) which was brutally terminated by the then government. However the locations of these post 1971 mass graves are hidden from the public knowledge. Numerous mass graves have been clandestinely created by the Sri Lankan government during the second youth uprising led by the same political party in the 1987-1990 period. Virtually all mass graves reported in the northern and eastern provinces of the country were resulted from the thirty year long civil war between the LTTE and the ruling governments which ended in 2009 and said to have contained the remains of minority Tamil speaking people died during the war.

The Chemmani Mass graves is the only one that the government of Sri Lanka has allowed the conduct of authentic and scientific investigation with the minimum political and military influences. Whereas all other cases the excavation and investigations have been hampered due to severe political and military influence. Recent unearthed mass graves such as those in Mannar and Matale also faced similar situations due to heavy military influence. It has been confirmed now that a key player of the government is one of those responsible for the Mass Graves in Matale, when he was an army officer in the area.

“Thousands of relatives of those victims of mass killings are screaming for justice, but the government is doing its best to prevent justice”, a reliable source told us.

We were able to published three related analyses of our main subject in which writers argue about the importance of a functional criminal justice system in the country. Ms. Kishali Pinto Jayawardene, a prominent activist and writer based in Colombo, came up with her excellent insight on the issue of disappearances in Sri Lanka, while Mr. Basil Fernando, a prominent human rights activist and jurist, currently a director of the Asian Human Rights Commission, based in Hong Kong, argued the core notions of the state mechanism in an use of improper force and violence in the country. 

Meanwhile, Ms. Melanie Klinkner, a senior lecturer in Law at Bournemouth University, England, took up the issue of mass grave investigations for international criminal procedure.

Apart from the cover story and the related analyses we have featured a column by Mr. Juan E. Méndez, the United Nations special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment, in which he commemorated the 10th year anniversary of the Abu Ghraib torture scenario led by the US led alliance. Meanwhile, Ms. Urmila Bhoola, the UN Special Rapporteur on Contemporary forms of Slavery and Mr. Jens Modvig, who is an elected member of the United Nations Committee Against Torture, talked to us exclusively.

In addition to these issues an inside story of the caged people in Hong Kong, a film review on one of most controversial movies, Nymphomaniac, a Danish drama film written and directed by Lars von Trier, two decades after the Rwanda’s genocide, challenges in elimination of torture, are also featured in this issue. A new feature that we are introducing in this issue, is ‘Voice from the Grassroots’. In this issue we talked to a grass root activist based in Colombo, who is working mainly on mass graves, police torture, and enforced disappearances in the country.

The online version of the issue will be available soon.

Torture: Asian and Global Perspectives is a bi-monthly magazine which focuses on torture and its related issues globally. Writers interested in having their research on this subject published, may submit their articles to torturemag@ahrc.asia

Exposed: Rajapaksa’s Secret Plans To Smuggle Blood Ivory From Customs

Exposed: Rajapaksa’s Secret Plans To Smuggle Blood Ivory From Customs
Colombo TelegraphMay 23, 2014
Despite Sri Lanka’s obligations under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, there has been a surreptitious move by the President Mahinda Rajapaksa to misappropriate an entire stock of blood ivory seized by the Sri Lanka Customs and now plans are being made to smuggle out the blood ivory from the Customs custody, Colombo Telegraph learnt.
Blood ivory seized by the Customs
Blood ivory seized by the Customs



Last year Colombo Telegraph exclusively revealed with the documentary evidence that the President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s attempt to misappropriate the entire stock of blood ivory.
Now it is more than a year since a massive quantity of illegal ivory valued over millions of dollars was seized by Customs in the port of Colombo whilst being transhipped to Dubai. They were believed to be from over 300 wild elephants poached in Kenyan game reserves.
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) require them to be destroyed in public to discourage this barbaric act. However being a signatory to the convention, it is learnt that the government of Sri Lanka continue to defy its obligations under the CITES                            Read More
Lanka e News the most victimized and hunted down media website : plaint filed in HRC- 11 respondents cited
(Lanka-e-News- 22.May.2014, 11.30PM) During the last several days , the despotic Rajapakse regime had barred access to 8 websites by its diabolically calculated efforts aimed at banning media websites.

The Sri Lanka trade union of cyber media organization and leaders of opposition political parties yesterday (21) filed a plaint with the human rights commission (HRC) against the recommendations of the regime’s Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (TRC) and the regime’s dictatorial actions.

UNP general secretary Tissa Attanayake , Nava sama samaja party leader Dr. Wickremebahu Karunaratne , Siritunge Jayasuriya , the convener of ten media oranization Saman Wagaarachchi, cyber media trade union convener Freddy Gamage and Website journalist Kelum Shivantha were present on the occasion. The UNP general secretary also submitted a adjournment-motion to the Parliament secretary.

The plaintiff who signed the petition handed over today to the HRC is : Freddy Gamage (Sri Lanka cyber media union convener)

The respondents are :
Lalith Weeratunge – Chairman of SL telecommunications regulatory commission (TRC
Anusha Pelpita – Director General of SL telecommunications regulatory commission 
Keheliya Rambikwella – Minister of mass media and information
Charitha Herath –Secretary to Ministry of mass media and information
Nimal Welgama –Chairman , Sri Lanka Telecom (SLT) 
Lalith De Silva – Chief Executive officer (CEO) , Sri Lanka Telecom (SLT) 
Kapila Chandrasena –CEO ,Mobitel private Co. 
Dr. Hans Wijeyasuriya – CEO and Director , Dialog Asiata consolidated Co.
Vel Salaman – CEO, Etisalat Lanka private Co. 
Thirukumar Nadesan – CEO , Hutchison telecom Co.
Suren Gunawardena – CEO , Bharathi Airtel Lanka Co.

In the plaint filed it is mentioned that the obstructions created against media websites are not something newly introduced , and within SL, the 8 websites that were victimized and banned by injunction orders are Lanka e news , Lanka news web , Lanka Guardian , Tamil net, Colombo telegraph , Sri Lanka Mirror, The independent and the Jaffna Muslims .

The plaint also states that among those websites , Lanka e news was the most victimized and hunted down. Some time ago the website office was set on fire, and one of its journalists Prageeth Ekneliyagoda went missing (still untraceable) . Its Editor Sandaruwan Senadheera had to flee the country , and the website is now operating from abroad. Six of its journalists were also arrested earlier by the CID , the plaint further states.

Ranil rubbishes MR’s Medamulana mantra!


Friday 23rd May 2014

  • Opposition Leader hits back at President’s remarks about his MIT stint
  • Snubs Medamulana as a good place to learn about “corruption, terror and oppression”
  • Says discussed Lanka, human rights, executive presidency and challenges of terrorism in Boston
Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday hit back at President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s remarks about his one-month fellowship at a top university in Boston, saying corruption, terror and oppression were the only political lessons to be learned in the President’s hometown of Medamulana.
“Since I didn’t need lessons in how to be that type of politician, I had no reason to go to Medamulana,” Wickremesinghe told a party meeting at Sirikotha yesterday.
Addressing the launch of Central Bank’s 2013 Annual Report in April, President Rajapaksa poked fun at Wickremesinghe’s MIT stint, saying the Opposition politician only needed to come to Medamulana to learn how to topple governments.
Wickremesinghe said he had spent his work-study tour in discussions about Sri Lanka and the South Asian region, facing the challenge of terrorism and how the violation of human rights and fundamental freedoms can make a state fall apart. Wickremesinghe said that going forward Sri Lanka needed to abolish the presidency and the preferential voting system and reinstate the 17th Amendment.
“I discussed at length how to build a governance structure after the abolishment of the executive presidency,” he said.

UN Women calls on global citizens to bring gender equality into focus 

Beijing+20 – The Beijing Platform for Action turns 20

Launches Beijing+20 Campaign: Empowering Women – Empowering Humanity: Picture it!
For immediate release 

Date: 22 May 2014

New York —
UN Women today launched a major campaign in the lead-up to the commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the historic Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing. A year of activities around the world will aim to mobilize governments and citizens alike to picture a world where gender equality is a reality and to join a global conversation on empowering women to empower humanity. 
Events will focus on achievements and gaps in gender equality and women’s empowerment since 189 governments adopted the 1995 Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. This visionary blueprint paves the way for women’s full and equal participation in all spheres of life and decision-making.  
“The Beijing Platform for Action is an unfulfilled promise to women and girls,” says UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka. “Our goal is straightforward: renewed commitment, strengthened action and increased resources to realize gender equality, women’s empowerment and the human rights of women and girls.”

The Beijing Women’s Conference drew an unprecedented 17,000 participants while 30,000 representatives attended the NGO Forum. Next year, in 2015, the United Nations will assess progress on implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action over the past 20 years, based on national reports currently being prepared by UN Member States.

The campaign will kick off with an all-day Tweetathon spanning the globe. Participating groups will include the UN, Lean In, the World YWCA, the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts, Half the Sky, the European Women’s Lobby, the Women’s Media Centre, Devex and other regional and national experts.

UN Women will unveil a global information hub featuring diverse voices, testimonies of personal experiences and achievement, celebrity champions and a calendar to track Beijing+20 events. The HeforShe web platform will spotlight prominent men standing up to end violence against women and advance equality. UN Women will support engagement through its network of country offices and release an interactive Facebook app, “Close the Gap”.

“This anniversary takes place at an historic moment,” stresses UN Women’s Mlambo-Ngucka, “as the nations of the world are coming together to accelerate progress to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015 and define a new global development framework. We must seize this once-in-a-generation opportunity to position gender equality, women’s rights and women’s empowerment at the centre of the global agenda and make it a reality.”

Major campaign events are being planned around the world. This June, tens of thousands of people will gather in Sweden to advocate for the protection of the human rights of women and girls. In September, at the Climate Summit in New York, a special event will be held with women heads of State and activists. In India in November, men and boys will make a show of force for gender equality.
The formal commemoration of the 20th anniversary will take place during the 59th session of the Commission on the Status of Women and International Women’s Day 2015 will be dedicated to Beijing+20. A high-level commitment meeting is expected in September 2015.

During the past two decades much progress has been made in women’s legal rights, educational achievements, and participation in public life. But much still remains to be done to address gender wage gaps and unequal opportunities, low representation of women in leadership in public office and the private sector, child marriage, rampant violence and other violations against women and girls.  
“Today I call on everyone to be part of the solution,” said Ms Mlambo-Ngcuka. “Picture It! Together we can realize the promise of Beijing: equality between women and men.”

This press release is also available in ArabicChineseFrenchRussian and Spanish.
Watch our campaign teaser video here: http://youtu.be/dHliULCiSCA
For more information:

  • Sharon Grobeisen; Tel: +1 646 781-4753; sharon.grobeisen[at]unwomen.org

When The Broken Lute Sings

By K. Navarasan -May 23, 2014
Colombo TelegraphLodged somewhere in a crease between memory and forgetting is my stillborn Sri Lanka. I have it embalmed in a jar filled with nostalgia, faded photographs, and all the shattered verses in my heart that lament for the red earth and pouring rain in Jaffna. Every so often, I take out my jar and carefully study it under the dim moonlight of my emotions where reality and imagination dissolve each other.
navarasanThere is one memory so vivid that I no longer know if it is real or created in absentia. I am four years old sitting in a relative’s house along K.K.S. Road and the plaintive call of Ilaiyaraaja’s “à®°ாசாத்திஉன்ன à®•ாணாத à®¨ெஞ்சு à®•ாத்தாடி à®ªோலாடுது” (My darling, the heart that has not seen you dances aimlessly as a kite) cools me in the heat of the mid-afternoon sun. I did not understand the words back then but the melody has buried itself deep in my memory. Years later, returning for the first time in 2003 and turning into my grandfather’s lane, I can barely hear the auto-rickshaw driver above the song pressing against the insides of my head. Even now, the slightest tune, accent and smell that reminds me of Jaffna uncloses me, perhaps much too easily according to some friends who I know are also hurting even if our reasons differ.
Tonight especially, my memory is like the moon, “…full and bright, so bright you can see all its scars.”
My remembering does not begin on May 18 when one man died or on May 19 when another man declared “victory”. 5 years and too many decades later, my own remembrance begins today instead, on May 20 – the first day after – when the crowds have dispersed, parades have ended, flags of all colours have been put away, banners rolled up again, the social media chatter has started to die down, galas and dinner-dances resume, and many in Sri Lanka have moved on ignoring the fact that while we may be a united country, we still remain a divided people despite the bright paint and smooth roads of the Northern Spring.
Today, I remember those lives lost on that damned beach and the tens of thousands of more lives lost over the years in lanes, fields, streets, lagoons, mosques, churches, trains and bus stations. I make myself remember even those who died still clothed in their skins of lions and tigers, and recall that it was also on this land that chivalrous kings once built lasting edifices commemorating the valour of the kings they defeated in battle. I do not have any words for the dead, only prayers that I offer in the Hindu kovils and Buddhist temples that I pass through in Southeast Asia, ironically during this of all months. I know words will not resurrect them but I hope my prayers will help their souls find some rest. I prostrate before the Buddha praying that He helps us conquer the many Maras that still run amok in our hearts and minds so that the Earth can bear witness to an empathetic, truthful, just and enlightened Sri Lanka in my lifetime.
Today, I also remember my responsibility towards the living – those survivors of a genocide – who continue to suffer grave injustices to their life, liberty and dignity. I remember the young men and women in Vavuniya and Kandy who have traded guns and capsules for pens and poems and struggle to pursue their dreams to get a university education; female heads of shattered households in Jaffna who drive auto-rickshaws to educate their children; widows in Kilinochchi who bravely organize themselves despite threats and surveillance; students in Mullaitivu whose smiles hide scars of war that are not always visible; the hardworking father living in a shack in Mullivaaikal who tells me with shining eyes that his daughter has taught him to finally read; former female rebel cadres, twice forsaken by those they fought against and those they fought for; illiterate and widowed sisters in Muttur prostituting themselves to support their children and their alcoholism; young wives looking for missing husbands; farmers who fight for rights to the land of their forefathers; and mothers, so many mothers from Point Pedro to Dondra still looking for missing sons and daughters.
In remembering those who are alive, I also catch the briefest glimpse of the dignified, autonomous future that is possible for them. I recognize that anything can be done to help them, no matter how small the gesture is or whatever labeling and pigeonholing that one is rewarded with in return, is needed now more so than ever before. I read somewhere once that a society is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable members. To protect our most vulnerable citizens in Sri Lanka, then, is a duty that we have not only to them but also to each other. It is that duty that makes me a Muslim when mosques are attacked, a Sinhalese when disempowered citizens in the rural west lose their lives fighting big businesses and the state to simply access clean water, a Christian when churches are vandalized, and a student when poor students are arrested and taken away for demanding more financial aid.
It is this same duty that also makes all of us Tamils now regardless of where in Sri Lanka we were born, what language we speak, and what faith we practice. In the end, the legacy we leave behind for our children and our children’s children will be measured by how our generation answers the national question rightfully posed by our Tamil people. We have been granted a precious opportunity for our own redemption and regain that what we have lost – I hope we take it before it is too late.
The pouring rain over the years has not quite washed away your red earth, à®°ாசாத்தி. One day, all our restless kites, frayed by factory jobs and long winters, mutated tongues in far-flung places too numerous to count, and voices hoarse from shouting in the streets and at each other, will come to rest in your lap. And on that day, I will break open the jar and breathe life into my stillborn Sri Lanka.
*Navarasan is a Canadian of Sri Lankan Tamil origin who has long had an interest in the places, people and politics of the country of his birth. He continues to support efforts that seek to provide justice, truth and peace for all the communities in Sri Lanka.

Thousands of state employees not received pension gratuity for three years


ceylon-teachers-union logoThe All Ceylon Trade Union Federation has said that 18,000 state employees have not received the pension gratuity for three years.

The Federation has said the state employees have not received Rs 700 million in pension gratuity as the funds allocated have been spent by the government on other activities.
The Transparency International Sri Lanka (TISL) has also reportedly confirmed the union’s claim.
According to TISL, Director General of Pensions, S.S. Hettiarachchi is responsible for this situation and the Treasury has not released the money yet.
According to the new circular of the Department of Pensions, pensioners can obtain the gratuity in the form of a loan from a government bank.
The revelation was made when a petition presented by the All Ceylon Trade Union Federation against the move to slash the pension gratuity at the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) was heard recently.

EC: Only God knows if 17A could help Opp. win next election


article_image
By Shamindra Ferdinando-

Elections Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya yesterday said that only the God knew whether the restoration of the 17th Amendment to the Constitution could help the Opposition win the next national level election.

Speculation is rife in political circles that President Mahinda Rajapaksa will declare a presidential election early next year.

Deshapriya was responding to a query by The Island at a media briefing at his office.

Asked whether he subscribed to the Opposition’s assertion that setting up of an Independent Election Commission would create a level playing field, thereby enabling them to defeat the ruling coalition, a smiling Polls Chief said that Election Department officials couldn’t respond to that query. Only God would be able to answer that, he said. Deshapriya instructed Deputy Commissioner M. M. Mohamed to translate his response into Tamil.

When pressed for an answer, Deshapriya pointed out that the Opposition had won the Colombo Municipal Council polls in 2011 without having an Independent Election Commission.

The UNP, JVP and the Democratic Party (DP) are pushing for the establishment of five Independent Commissions namely, Election Commission, Public Service Commission, National Police Commission, Human Right Commission, Permanent Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption, Finance Commission and Delimitation Commission.

The polls chief dismissed allegations that his department was under political pressure. Commenting on suggestion that he emulate the Indian Election Commission, Deshapriya said that he would like to know what the media as well as political parties believed the proposed Election Commission under the 17th Amendment could do what he was unable to do at present. He said that the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, too, envisaged the setting up of an Independent Commission, though it was yet to be named. The 18th Amendment stipulates that outsiders couldn’t be appointed to the Independent Commission.

Deshapriya alleged that political parties here turned even a minor election into a national one.

Deshapriya warned political parties not to ridicule his department as it would be inimical to their interests. The official alleged that such strategies would result in voters losing faith in the electoral process leading to voter apathy.

The Election Secretariat was ready to conduct Uva Provincial Council poll later this year, Deshapriya said, adding that if the council was allowed to complete its full term, the election would be held on the third Saturday of November 2014. However, such an eventuality was unlikely due to the presentation of next budget in November. Deshapriya referred to recent statement attributed to Cabinet spokesman Minister Keheliya Rambukwelle that the Uva PC poll would be held in September.

According to the election calendar, local government polls are scheduled for next year. Presidential and parliamentary polls are scheduled for 2016.

The Difference Between The Sri Lankan State, Prabhakaran And Wijeweera


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Hoole -May 23, 2014

Rajan Hoole
Rajan Hoole
The 1990s: The Culture of Untruth and a Perilous Vacuum – Part 8
The Culture Of Untruth
For the failure of the process of accountability, the new government can only be partially blamed. It is unrealistic to expect politicians
to carry through a seemingly thankless task while the vocal members of the public are either hostile or apathetic and the ‘independent press’ was launching tirade after tirade. In its editorial comment on Two years of the PA, which appeared as the lead item, the Sunday Times of 18th August 1996 attacked the PA Government in an unprecedented manner. It accused the Government of mismanagement, and, in an obvious reference to the commissions of inquiry, of failing to unite the country. It ended with the Cromwellian expression, ‘For God’s sake go’.
Let us take what the Sunday Times editor wrote under the name Migara in the Weekend of 4th November 1982 after Jayewardene’s victory at the presidential election and his concoction of the ‘Naxalite Plot’ to detain key members of the opposition. He wrote, “The abortive October Revolution by political bankrupts did not take place. The voters of Lanka made a wise decision to avert such a crisis.” We know how Jayewardene united the country. This gives us some idea of the degree of honesty behind these tirades against the PA government. Anything approaching such attacks would have been unthinkable under Jayewardene or Premadasa.
An article by ‘Police Correspondent’ in the Sunday Times of 16th February 1997, accused the PA government of letting the LTTE off the hook for Athulathmudali’s murder and in turn wrongly blaming good police officers of complicity. It concluded thus: “We will peddle this [distorted] thinking until the south of Sri Lanka gets subverted, and becomes a subject state of the Tamil Confederation.” The primordial fears of the Sinhalese public were being played upon, while carefully avoiding an independent examination of the evidence. We will go into this in the next chapter.
                                                                                   Read More

Chinese military training for Sri Lanka


china 1The Sri Lankan military personnel are to receive training from China in the future following the decision by the US government to slash military cooperation with Sri Lanka.

A high ranking Chinese military delegation currently visiting Sri Lanka has met with Sri Lanka’s Commander of the Army in Colombo.
The six-member delegation, headed by Chief of Staff of the Chinese People’s Armed Police Lieutenant General Niu Zhizong is in Sri Lanka on a three-day official visit.
During the meeting with the Army Commander, the Chinese Chief of Armed Police has offered training opportunities for Sri Lankan officers in China, in addition to training slots that have already been allocated in China for Sri Lankan service personnel.
Lieutenant General Niu has requested the Sri Lankan Commander to send maximum numbers of officers to China for training courses in anti-terrorism, anti-high jacking and disaster management spheres.
Lieutenant General Daya Ratnayake in response has invited Chinese officers to join different training courses, conducted in Army training centers in Sri Lanka as many of those courses are on par with international standards.

Modi Swearing-in: Lankan President Invites Tamil Province Leader to Defuse Anger in India

Reported by Sreenivasan Jain, Edited by Deepshikha Ghosh | Updated: May 23, 2014
Lok Sabha Elections 2014
Modi Swearing-in: Lankan President Invites Tamil Province Leader to Defuse Anger in India
File pic: Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who will be among the world leaders to watch Narendra Modi's swearing in as Prime Minister on Monday, has taken a big step towards reconciliation in his own country and defusing anger among Indian Tamil parties over his visit. He has invited the Chief Minister of Lanka's Tamil provinces to join his delegation to India.

CV Wigneswaran, the Chief Minister of Northern Provinces, is yet to confirm his participation, but Sri Lankan officials say they are "hopeful."

Mr Modi's invitation to Mr Rajapaksa has upset regional parties in Tamil Nadu, including his BJP's ally MDMK. (BJP's Tamil Nadu Ally MDMK Opposes Lankan President's Presence at Modi Swearing-in)

MDMK chief Vaiko today met BJP president Rajnath Singh and asked him to speak to Mr Modi and "avoid" Mr Rajapaksa's presence at the oath ceremony, which, he said, would hurt the feelings of the Tamil people. 

On Thursday, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa described Mr Modi's move as "unfortunate". (Jayalalithaa says Narendra Modi's Invite to Lankan President for Swearing-In 'Unfortunate')

The invite to the Lankan president has "deeply upset the people of Tamil Nadu and wounded their sentiments," she said, adding, "Particularly, with regard to the relationship of the new Central Government with the Government of Tamil Nadu, it would have been better if this ill-advised move had been avoided." (On Narendra Modi's Guest List 2500 People, SAARC Leaders)

The Chief Minister's statement came after her silence despite the criticism of other parties had raised speculation. AIADMK sources said the party views it as a first faux pas by Mr Modi, who has won a big mandate to head a government at the Centre.

Ms Jayalalithaa, who is said to share a good rapport with Mr Modi, has not clarified whether she will attend the swearing-in ceremony.   
 
The DMK, headed by M Karunanidhi, also said Mr Modi could have "avoided" inviting the Sri Lankan President and also that the Prime Minister should "understand the feelings" of the people of Tamil Nadu. (Narendra Modi Could Have Avoided Inviting Lankan President for Swearing-in: DMK)

Most political parties in Tamil Nadu accuse Mr Rajapaksa of presiding over the killing of civilians in the final stages of the war against the Tamil separatist outfit LTTE. It is a political minefield in Tamil Nadu, where assembly elections are due in 2016.