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Saturday, June 7, 2014
You dirty beach! Chinese resort left looking like a tip after HALF A MILLION sun-seekers descend on it
4 June 2014
Dameisha Beach Park received some 480,000 tourists in the past three days during the Dragon Boat Festival
They ruined the 160,000-square-metre beach with 362 tonnes of garbage
If you thought litter had become an intolerable problem on our beaches, spare a thought for these holidaymakers.






Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2647256/You-dirty-beach-500-000-sun-seekers-descend-Chinese-resort-start-3-day-national-holiday-leave-looking-like-tip.html#ixzz33yfkfVH7
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If you thought litter had become an intolerable problem on our beaches, spare a thought for these holidaymakers.
They arrived for a day out at Dameisha Beach Park in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong province, only to be greeted by 362 tonnes of garbage.
The 160,000-square-metre beach is now a chaotic scene of discarded food and drinks packages, broken sun mats and inflatable toys.
The trash was left behind by some 480,000 visitors who attended the Dragon Boat Festival holiday.






Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2647256/You-dirty-beach-500-000-sun-seekers-descend-Chinese-resort-start-3-day-national-holiday-leave-looking-like-tip.html#ixzz33yfkfVH7
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Friday, June 6, 2014
Sexual Violence in Conflict: Sri Lanka - long history of rape by state security forces06 June 2014
In the run up to the ESVC summit, we revisit the mounting evidence which documents the widespread, systematic and on-going use of sexual violence by Sri Lanka's military against Tamils, that occurs with absolute impunity.
See our previous features:
An orgy of rape in final days (02 Jun 2014)
Rape, Sexual Assault and Forced Prostitution of Tamils in Military-Run in IDP camps (03 Jun 2014)
Sexual violence in detention as torture 2009-2014 (04 Jun 2014)
Systematic, deliberate and intended to destroy (05 Jun 2014)
Sexual Violence in Conflict: Sri Lanka - long history of rape by state security forces
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| Krishanthy Kumaraswamy, 18y, gang raped and killed by soldiers on 7 August 1996 |
The use of rape and sexual violence by Sri Lankan armed forces against Tamils, far from being a feature of the last stages of the armed conflict, has been prominent through out the thirty year period of armed conflict, as well previously.
On Collision Course With India?
Our Government could be entering into a collision course with India over the ethnic problem. This is a possibility, indeed a probability, but not a certainty, which is why I have placed a question mark in the title of this article. Before dealing with that question I must make some clarifications arising out of my article “BJP and the SL Ethnic Problem“. In that article I argued that we must begin our relations with the BJP Government on the assumption that the fundamentals of Indian policy towards Sri Lanka remain unchanged: Sri Lanka by itself can pose no threat to India, but it could if it gangs up with certain powers against India, and except for that eventuality nothing precludes excellent Indo-Sri Lankan relations. By way of illustration I pointed to the fact that our relations with India were in general excellent except for a period when India believed that the 1977 Government was ganging up with the US against her.
Probably most Sri Lankans, including those equipped to make informed judgments on international relations, will not agree with my position. They will point out that India has had consistently bad relations with all its neighbours to the north, that in pursuit of total dominance in South Asia it broke up Pakistan, that its refusal to allow self-determination for Kashmir is indefensible, that it showed an expansionist drive by gobbling up Sikkim, that it has kept Bhutan in a satellite status, and that its exceptional relations with Sri Lanka are postulated on the latter being completely at the mercy of India. It is a powerful indictment. Instead of going into details I will point out certain factors that we must take into account if we are to formulate a fair-minded judgment on India’s foreign relations.
India has several neighbours. It is pertinent to recall Kautilya’s definition of enemies and friends. Who is your enemy? The country that is at your frontier. Who is your friend? The country that is at the frontier of the country that is at your frontier. That is not an invariant law, but it describes a disposition, a tendency to react in certain ways. Accordingly, we Sri Lankans tend to view India with suspicion, if not downright hostility, and we tend to regard with a kindly eye India’s northern neighbours, notably Pakistan and China. So if India has troubled relations with its neighbours, that is more or less in the natural order of things, and does not necessarily argue an innate aggressivity. If India has had on the whole better relations with Sri Lanka, perhaps part of the explanation is to be found in the Palk Straits. That narrow stretch of water serves the principle that Good fences make good neighbours. It is pertinent to recall that imperial powers usually sought to establish buffer zones, such as Afghanistan and Thailand, so as to avoid eyeball-to-eyeball confrontations with other imperial powers. Read More
Missing Persons Commission receives over 18,000 complaints
A Sri Lankan panel probing the disappearance of people during the country’s nearly three-decade long civil war has received nearly 18,600 complaints from the public, a senior official has said.
The Presidential Commission has so far held three sittings in January, February and March this year in Killinochchi, Jaffna in the north and Batticaloa in the east.
The fourth round of public sittings is to be held in the Batticaloa district this week.
So far 18,590 complaints have been received, inclusive of approximately 5,000 from relatives of missing security forces personnel, panel secretary SW Gunadasa said.
The commission had thus far inquired into 462 complaints, which are being analysed for further investigations through an independent investigation team.
The commission’s mandate was extended in February this year. They would now function until mid-August this year.
The three-member panel came to be appointed to inquire into and report on alleged abductions and disappearances during the period from June 10, 1990 to May 19, 2009.
The Presidential Commission has so far held three sittings in January, February and March this year in Killinochchi, Jaffna in the north and Batticaloa in the east.
The fourth round of public sittings is to be held in the Batticaloa district this week.
So far 18,590 complaints have been received, inclusive of approximately 5,000 from relatives of missing security forces personnel, panel secretary SW Gunadasa said.
The commission had thus far inquired into 462 complaints, which are being analysed for further investigations through an independent investigation team.
The commission’s mandate was extended in February this year. They would now function until mid-August this year.
The three-member panel came to be appointed to inquire into and report on alleged abductions and disappearances during the period from June 10, 1990 to May 19, 2009.
Revaluation of Values: Applying the Pullman Principle to Post-War Sri Lanka
Photo by LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI/AFP/Getty Images via Al Jazeera America
1,500 undergraduates suspended since 2010
By Aisha Nazim-June 5, 2014
Over 1,500 undergraduates have been suspended up to date since 2010, with more undergraduates being imprisoned, harassed and abducted in an ever increasing rise in student suppression, student activists said.
Addressing the media last evening (4), the Inter University Students Federation (IUSF) alleged that over 1,500 students have been banned from their respective universities, 76 have been imprisoned, three have been abducted and three have been killed.
The IUSF Convener also charged government affiliated politicians of stirring unrest between undergraduates and villagers, citing the discord which resulted in the closure of the Ruhuna University earlier this week.
"We recently saw politicians in the Matara District rally with violent protestors, and then saw them encourage other villagers to join in the agitations against undergraduates. Is this the type of behaviour we have to now expect from politicians? Are they supposed to sow discord? They are supposed to resolve community issues and take care of their electorate, not cause trouble," IUSF Convener Najith Indika said.
He pointed out that while harassment of undergraduates previously occurred in the dark, it is now practiced openly, especially after Higher Education Minister, S.B. Dissanayake, publicly threatened students and their parents.
The Minister told the media that student activists and their families would have to go into hiding if the undergraduates attempted to disrupt the annual Dayata Kirula exhibition scheduled to be held later this year.
Citing the Colombo University Arts Faculty and the Ruhuna University – both which are indefinitely shut down – Indika claimed that the educational authorities' manner of resolving problems is to shut down universities and suppress student activism, instead of addressing issues posed by the students.
By Aisha Nazim-June 5, 2014 Over 1,500 undergraduates have been suspended up to date since 2010, with more undergraduates being imprisoned, harassed and abducted in an ever increasing rise in student suppression, student activists said.
Addressing the media last evening (4), the Inter University Students Federation (IUSF) alleged that over 1,500 students have been banned from their respective universities, 76 have been imprisoned, three have been abducted and three have been killed.
The IUSF Convener also charged government affiliated politicians of stirring unrest between undergraduates and villagers, citing the discord which resulted in the closure of the Ruhuna University earlier this week.
"We recently saw politicians in the Matara District rally with violent protestors, and then saw them encourage other villagers to join in the agitations against undergraduates. Is this the type of behaviour we have to now expect from politicians? Are they supposed to sow discord? They are supposed to resolve community issues and take care of their electorate, not cause trouble," IUSF Convener Najith Indika said.
He pointed out that while harassment of undergraduates previously occurred in the dark, it is now practiced openly, especially after Higher Education Minister, S.B. Dissanayake, publicly threatened students and their parents.
The Minister told the media that student activists and their families would have to go into hiding if the undergraduates attempted to disrupt the annual Dayata Kirula exhibition scheduled to be held later this year.
Citing the Colombo University Arts Faculty and the Ruhuna University – both which are indefinitely shut down – Indika claimed that the educational authorities' manner of resolving problems is to shut down universities and suppress student activism, instead of addressing issues posed by the students.
Tamil Eelam Beleaguered In The Matrix Of Delhi And Colombo

By J.A. Kathiravan -June 6, 2014
Tamil Eelam Beleaguered in the Matrix of New Delhi and Colombo: Notes on the regional geo-politics of an oppressed nation

What is at the crux of the matter is that the President of Sri Lanka is the chief executive of a genocidal state which carried out the Mullivaaykaalgenocide in 2009 in which tens of thousands of Eezham Tamils were deliberately and brutally massacred. However apathy towards genocide is nothing restricted to the BJP alone when considering that all the previous governments in New Delhi, mainly when led by Congress, courted successive governments in Colombo during their genocidal efforts against Eezham Tamils. In fact from 1987-1990 the Indian establishment was directly involved in brutal attempts to annihilate the Eezham National liberation struggle through the occupation of the Tamil homeland by the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF). This was the consequence of the bilateral deal signed between Colombo and New Delhi known as the Indo-Lanka accord in order to impose the feeble 13th Amendment to settle the national question on the island.Read More
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(Lanka-e-News- 05.June.2014, 9.30PM) The high security zone of Tangalle town where the Carlton house of Medamulana MaRa is situated was turned into battlefield in much the same way as was the war in Mulliwaikal because those individuals who turn against the Rajapakses are being murdered in cold blood and in broad daylight. Some days ago , an attempt was made in broad daylight in front of the court premises to kill an individual who came to the Tangalle court for a case , while a friend of his of the village , was murdered brutally by shooting in broad daylight in the middle of the Town .
The victim of yesterday’s murder is a father of three children. He works as a conductor in a private bus . When the bus was readying to leave after loading the bus , two individuals who arrived in a motor bike with helmets covering their faces have inquired ‘where is Amila who escaped in the shooting incident on the earlier occasion?’ When they were told ‘ I do not know.’ The assassins had exclaimed ‘ you are his closest friend , aren’t you,’ and one of them had shot him in his head after drawing out a pistol.
The conductor Prabath , the victim had immediately fallen down dead. Though Amila had criminal charges against him , his friend Prabath was having no such charges. He was only a very close friend of Amila. As is common in present the lawless climate stoked by the Rajapakse regime , though there were policemen and a large crowd when this tragedy took place in the middle of the town , and mind you in the high security zone , the killing was done without any hindrance and with complete impunity. Moreover , the assassins were able to flee the scene unobstructed.
The reason for the attempted murder on Amila Rajapakse by shooting on the 22 nd of May was his becoming an enemy of the Nil Balakaya after deserting it . It had come to light that it was on the instructions of Namal Rajapakse this crime was attempted , and his co ordinating secretary Moorthy Kodituwakku , an army officer was involved. Lanka e news via two separate earlier reports revealed that the Tangalle police OIC and crime division OIC rendered assistance to the criminals led by Pallikudawe Ukkuwa who made that attempt.
Feed Our Children: They Are Our Future
“Kodithu kodithu varumai kodithu athilum kodithu ilamayil varumai”
Poverty is cruel but it is even more cruel to be poor when young.
(June 06, 2014, Bradford UK, Sri Lanka Guardian) According to Dr Pujitha Wickremasinghe, senior lecturer in paediatrics at The Faculty of Medicine, Colombo University over 1.2 mn children attend school without breakfast as The Island reported two days ago. This is a sad indictment on the collective national psyche that 30 percent of our children are attending school without breakfast.
Although a cliché, children are our future. Unless and until we turn our focus towards their well-being we have failed as a nation. Children in Colombo suburbs get up at 5.00am to be ready for the school van saddled with bags of books as though they are climbing Everest with perhaps a kimbula bunis or a bite of sandwich to say the least.
These children have to sit through hours at school until they reach home. Unlike during our childhood, their mothers are compelled to work full-time to meet the mortgage on their homes and it is not easy to make sure their children are provided with the necessary balanced meals. Parents try their best and if they resort to fast food to feed them one cannot call them ignorant. They have no choice.
So it is incumbent on the school authorities and on the government to make sure our future leaders are provided with basic nutrients to develop themselves in their formative years at least up to the age of 12.
When one looks back on the insurgencies so far, it gathered momentum in the seventies onwards when politics and privatisation in the island veered towards strengthening those in power both in politics and commerce to the detriment of the ordinary masses. The causes were clearly unemployment, poverty and hunger and not national pride as our politicians would have us believe..
Perhaps the mostly affected are the upcountry Tamil children. Their plight sealed by the colonial powers was worsened by the Sri Lankan politicians who are still keeping them in bondage; they work along with their parents in tea and rubber plantations, their diet would place their counterparts in Africa as well-fed.
Then we hear of the startling news milk imports are levied 25 percent tax which would raise the price of powdered milk. The government which subsidises meals for politicians in parliament canteens and staff in government institutions is unable to give a free glass of milk and some bunis to all children in state schools.
It is a crying shame the government and school authorities fail to realise a child’s development begins in its formative years. It is not without this realisation that our parents poured the horribly tasting Seven Seas oil (there were no tablets in our days) down our throat every night after dinner and gave us Virol on top of the simple balanced meals consisting of various pulses, meat, fish and vegetables which varied from day to day.
Even after a hearty breakfast this writer was forever hungry since our first lesson at school was PT. So I asked my mother she could give me a chit to enable me to have the delicious bunis provided free. She would not hear of it and I thought this was child cruelty. I had to wait another two hours before lunch. Once a month Nestle would give us iced Nestomalt drink as part of its advertising campaign together with a deck of playing cards. I would stand in the queue at least twice and get a second helping.
UK is bringing in legislation that by September all the children would be provided with free school meals. The UK government is furiously debating this issue as of national importance and priority over and above other bills being debated. This is a country which provides child benefit and tax credit so children do not go without food, clothing and shelter already.
What do we have in Sri Lanka? Parents begging with their children, children breaking stones instead of attending schools, children cleaning gardens to earn a few bucks to help their parents.
The next time you see politicians with their convoys following to plush restaurants gather your children and pelt them with stones en masse. With hungry children in their thousands they cannot apprehend only a few. Form a children’s brigade on par with trade unions and storm Diyawanna and proceed to UNICEF. Do a sit in and do not move until the weasels inside see pot bellies and emaciated children holding placards to demand their due from the national coffers which is being plundered by the fat cats as they emerge with their bloated bellies burping and guffawing.
My Office has now put in place a staff team for the Sri Lanka Inquiry - Navi Pillay
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| All set for the SL inquiry |
''I note also that last month marked the fifth anniversary of the end of the war in SriLanka, where the scars created by terrorism and conflict have yet to heal. My Office has now put in place a staff team that will be supported by several experts and Special Procedures mandate holders, to conduct the comprehensive investigation mandated by this Council in order to advance accountability, and thus reconciliation. I encourage the Government to take this opportunity to cooperate with a credible truth-seeking process''
Read the full speech: Opening Statement by Ms. Navi Pillay, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Human Rights Council 26th Session
(Advance copy /Check against delivery )
Geneva, 10 June, 2014
Mr. President,
Distinguished Members of the Human Rights Council,
Excellencies and Colleagues,
I have the honour to address the 26th session of the Human Rights Council – my last as High Commissioner for Human Rights. When I first addressed you, in September 2008, I pledged to embark on an open-minded, frank, and reciprocally reinforcing interaction, based on the premise that the credibility of human rights work depends on impartiality and commitment to truth, with no tolerance for double standards.
அச்சுவேலி, திக்கம் முகாம்களை மூட முடியாது : அடித்து கூறுகிறார் வணிகசூரிய
தமிழீழ விடுதலை புலிகளின் அமைப்பு மீண்டும் உயிர் பெறுவதை தடுக்கும் நடவடிக்கைகளுக்கு அச்சுவேலி இராணுவ முகாம் மிகவும் முக்கியமென கருதப்படுவதனால் எக்காரணம் கொண்டும் அந்த முகாம் அகற்றப்பட மாட்டாதென இராணுவ ஊடகப் பேச்சாளர் பிரிகேடியர் ருவன் வணிகசூரிய தெரிவித்தார்.
பாதுகாப்பு மற்றும் நகர அபிவிருத்தி அமைச்சின் ஊடக மத்திய நிலையத்தில் இன்று நடைபெற்ற ஊடகவியலாளர் சந்திப்பின் போது அவர் இதனை தெரிவித்தார்.
அவர் தொடர்ந்து கருத்து தெரிவிக்கையில்:-
குறித்த முகாம் 1995 ஆம் ஆண்டில் அமைக்கப்பட்டது இந்த முகாமில் 09 குடும்பங்களுக்குரிய காணிகள் உள்வாங்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாக தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. இருப்பினும் இவர்களுக்குரிய நஷ்ட ஈட்டுத்தொகையை வழங்க அரசாங்கம் நடவடிக்கை எடுத்துள்ளது.
அரச சேவைகளுக்காக பொதுமக்களின் காணியை சுவீகரிக்கும் சட்டம் 1950 ஆம் ஆண்டு கொண்டுவரப்பட்டது. இச்சட்டத்தின் பிரகாரமே வடக்கில் இராணுவ முகாம்களுக்காக காணிகள் சுவீகரிக்கப்படுகின்றன.
இவ்வாறான காணி சுவீகரிப்பு இல்லையென்றால் நாட்டில் இன்றைய அதிவேகப் பாதைகள் இருக்காது. அபிவிருத்தி பணிகள் நடைபெற்றிருக்க முடியாது.
மேலும் நுணாவிலிலுள்ள இராணுவ முகாமை இன்னும் 02 மாதங்களில் மூட நாம் தீர்மானித்துள்ளோம். அங்கிருந்த இராணுவத்தினருக்காக ஏனைய முகாம்களில் கட்டிடங்கள் அமைக்கும் பணிகள் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டுள்ளன. கட்டிடப்பணிகள் முடிந்த பின்னர் இம் முகாம் மூடப்படும்.
திக்கத்திலுள்ள இராணுவ முகாம் புலிகளிடமிருந்து இராணுவம் கைப்பற்றியதாகும். அதனையும் இராணுவம் தம் வசம் தொடர்ந்தும் வைத்திருக்கும். அப்பிரதேசத்தில் காணி உரிமை கோருவோருக்கு அரசாங்கம் நட்டஈடு வழங்கும் என்றும் பிரிகேடியர் மேலும் சுட்டிக்காட்டினார்.
My staff ready to launch SL probe: Pillay
By Dharisha Bastians-Friday 06th June 2014
- UNHRC 26th Session opens on Tuesday
- UN Human Rights Chief to tell HRC on Tuesday that team is in place
- Urges Govt to cooperate with ‘truth seeking process’
- OHCHR team to be supported by several experts and special rapporteurs: Pillay
- UN Rights Chief to tell Council: Scars of terrorism and conflict yet to heal in Sri Lanka

Opening a UN Human Rights Council session for the final time on Tuesday UN Rights Chief Navi Pillay will inform the body of 47 member states that her staff team was ready to launch an investigation into allegations of major abuses during the seven years of Sri Lanka’s civil war.“My office has now put in place a staff team that will be supported by several experts and Special Procedures mandate holders to conduct the comprehensive investigation mandated by this Council in order to advance accountability and thus reconciliation,” outgoing UN High Commissioner for Human Rights will tell the Council when its 26th Session opens on Tuesday (10 June) in Geneva.
Pillay who will retire from her position after a six year term in office in August, will encourage the Government of Sri Lanka to take the opportunity “to cooperate with a credible truth-seeking process.”
“I note also that last month marked the fifth anniversary of the end of the war in Sri Lanka, where the scars created by terrorism and conflict have yet to heal,” Pillay will tell the Council on Monday, according to an advance copy of her speech released by her office. Daily FT exclusively reported last Monday (29) the composition of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) investigative team that will probe allegations of major human rights violations by both sides in the Sri Lankan conflict, as mandated by a resolution passed at the Human Rights Council in March this year.
The team would be drawn largely from the OHCHR but also include two senior experts of international stature and consult with three special rapporteurs – on extrajudicial and arbitrary killing, torture and enforced disappearances, the Daily FT report revealed. The investigators will travel to Sri Lanka – access is granted – and also North America, Europe and the Asia Pacific region to gather evidence and witness testimony.
SL Army conducts archaeology, The Hindu relays history
[TamilNet, Friday, 06 June 2014, 17:23 GMT]
In addition to doing agriculture, industries and tourism, genocidal Sri Lanka’s occupying Sinhala Army, groomed to set a new paradigm jointly by Washington, New Delhi, Beijing and the UN, has started conducting archaeology too in the country of Eezham Tamils. The military claims ‘exploring and discovering’ a Buddhist site at the locality of Uruththirapuram Siva temple in Ki’linochchi. Meanwhile, The Hindu last week relayed a one-sided history projected by Colombo’s High Commission in New Delhi, on the Buddhist connections of Lanka and Odisha (Orissa), to envisage new business enterprises. The relay also added on Sita temple in Nuwara Eliya, a fake promoted into a larger regional myth in recent times. Friday Forum Did Not Make Any Attempt To Seek My Opinion – NPC Opposition Leader
Responding to the recent statement issued by the Friday Forum titled “Post-war realities in the Northern Province”, the opposition leader of the Northern Provincial Council last night said although the Friday Forum has met cross section of the society in Jaffna & Kilinochchi, its representatives have not made any attempt to seek the opinion of the Leader of Opposition of the Northern Provincial Council.
Sending a letter to the Friday Forum, S. Thavarajah, the opposition leader of the Northern Provincial Council said; “It is evident from the Chief Minister’s Speech that neither the President nor the government is causing any hindrance to invite funds from the Tamil Diaspora and to start investment as stated in the Election Manifesto. However, up to now not a single investment has come into the Northern Province. Who is responsible for this? Whether it is the inability of the elected body or the impediment caused by the Government?”
We publish below the letter in full;
The Friday Forum
No.2, Greenlands Avenue,
Colombo 5,
Sri Lanka.
Dear Sirs,
Post-war realities in the Northern Province
This is in response to a statement released by Friday Forum on 01st of June 2014 titled ‘’Post-war realities in the Northern Province’’ signed by Mr. Jayantha Dhanapala, Prof. Savitri Goonesekerere & Mr. Tissa Jayatilaka on behalf of the forum. Read More
Crime among Sri Lanka soldiers on rise
Police say nearly 18 percent of crimes in 2014 were committed by the armed forces [Dinouk Colombage/Al Jazeera]
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![]() Dinouk Colombage-Last updated: 06 Jun 2014 Colombo, Sri Lanka - Crime and desertion in Sri Lanka's armed forces are on the rise five years since the end of the country’s civil war because of a lack of adequate counselling, psychologists have said.Experts say desertion and crime in armed forces has spiked five years after civil war end due to absence of counselling.
Police statistics suggest that in the first four months of 2014, nearly 18 percent of reported crimes were committed by members of the armed forces - a large increase on the 5 percent reported for the whole of 2013.
Experts are now advising against the continued wartime practise by which senior officers counsel soldiers living with the "mental scars" suffered in combat against violent or guerrilla groups.
Dr Prabath Gunatillaka, who lectures in psychology at the universities of Colombo and Canberra, believes the standard of counselling offered to Sri Lanka’s military personnel has fallen short of what should be expected for a country emerging from a 30-year war.
"When a group of soldiers are deployed in the field they do not have the luxury of counsellors, it is then that they resort to seeking assistance from their senior officers," said Gunatillaka.
"However, with the war being over and the soldiers attempting to reintegrate into civilian life they must be given access to certified psychologists. Relying on senior officers who have experienced the same traumas negates the effectiveness of counselling."
High desertion rate
SSP Ajith Rohana, a police spokesperson, has attributed many of the crimes committed by members of the armed forces to deserters.
Desertion has risen significantly since the end of the war, with military officials disclosing that nearly 30,000 soldiers - of the overall forces of 350,000 - are currently classed as deserters, and blaming this on financial hardship in their home villages.
Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasuriya, a military spokesperson, suggests that many of the deserters do not remain absent for more than a few months.
"Many of our soldiers are from the rural areas, they are often absent during the harvest period as they are helping their families," Brig Wanigasuriya said. "More often than not they return once the harvest is complete."
But psychologists say the lack of proper counselling available to the armed forces is inflating the desertion rate which, in turn, is heightening crime.
Dr Gunatillaka says soldiers who fight violent or guerrilla groups can be subjected to scenes not normally seen on a battlefield, triggering post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that fosters irrational behaviour. He believes the high number of desertions can also be attributed to the fact that these soldiers no longer feel constrained by the rules of the armed forces.
"Soldiers have been witness to scenes on battlefields that many of us cannot imagine; they have killed people and been praised for doing so," he said "They now believe that they are above the law, and this is reflected in their decision to desert and pursue criminal activities."
Counselling by officers
The decision to provide counselling to armed forces personnel is currently made by senior officers.
Wanigasuriya explained that the Sri Lankan army follows a procedure used by armed forces everywhere and insisted that it is providing the necessary counselling where required.
"Our officers are trained to assist the soldiers with any issues the face, be it emotionally or physically," he said.
The spokesperson denied suggestions that, where soldiers had committed crimes, these were the result of psychological scarring.
"None of our soldiers have suffered from PTSD - the counselling offered by the military has been very effective in ensuring there are no problems with its soldiers," he said.
According to Wanigasuriya, around 200 soldiers are currently admitted to psychiatric wards in military hospitals.
"We have such a low number of patients because the culture in our country ensures soldiers do not suffer from PTSD. They have close support from the other soldiers, and their families," he said.
However, Dr Gunatillaka disputes this claim, arguing that while Sri Lankan culture does encourage close-knit bonds between soldiers and their families, it also frowns upon psychological problems.
"Many soldiers who have seen combat suffer from PTSD - having a close family network would not avert the problem," he explained. "In fact a soldier will feel it is necessary to hide such issues from his or her family in our culture, and this will only exacerbate the problem."
Wartime trauma
Former sergeant Sarath Abeykoon, who left the army in 2012 after serving for 10 years and saw combat in the final weeks of the war, is now finding it difficult to adjust to civilian life and complains of suffering from flashbacks.
"I can be walking down the street when the smell of fumes would suddenly trigger a memory of the war," he said. "It is very difficult to live a normal life when I am not sure what will trigger such memories."
Dr Gunatillaka, who has been assessing the former sergeant’s condition, has diagnosed him as suffering from PTSD. "He is no danger to himself or anyone around him but his mental state is certainly fragile," the doctor explained.
While Abeykoon has sought the help of a psychologist, many other soldiers cannot afford such care or do not feel comfortable receiving it because counselling is considered a taboo.
The former sergeant revealed that he keeps his counselling sessions secret from his family and friends.
"When I was in the military I could always go to my commanding officer (CO) and speak to him if I felt it was necessary. When the war ended I did not have anyone else to talk to - very often my own CO would not really know what to say. While the option to be sent to the military hospital was available, our officers were not keen on this."
While Wanigasuriya points out that servicemen and women, both current and retired, have free health-care at military hospitals, this would not have helped Abeykoon.
He says he did not want to pursue treatment with the military because he felt they had not helped him properly while he was serving.
Follow Dinouk Colombage on Twitter: @dinoukc
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