Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Drive-By Acid Attack On Woman In Delhi Caught On Camera

The Huffington Post12/24/2014-AP
NEW DELHI (AP) — Two men riding a motorcycle threw acid on a woman in a crowded neighborhood in New Delhi, causing serious injuries, police said Wednesday.
The attack was captured on closed-circuit TV and was being investigated, police officer Suresh Chand said. It took place Tuesday when the two masked men rode past the woman in a crowded shopping area and brazenly flung acid at her face.

Chand gave few other details, but news reports said the woman suffered serious burns to her face and her right eye. The men also stole her purse before fleeing.

The attack, in a busy part of the Indian capital, highlights the attacks and harassment women face in India.

While the nation keeps no official statistics on acid attacks, there are regular reports in the media of attackers targeting victims to disfigure or blind them, often because of spurned sexual advances.

Islamic State did not shoot down Jordanian plane, US says

Channel 4 News
THURSDAY 25 DECEMBER 2014
A Jordanian jet fighter pilot is taken prisoner by the Islamic State after his plane crashed, but the US dispels claims from the militants they shot it down.
News
The US said evidence "clearly indicates" that the Islamic State group (IS) did not shoot down a Jordanian fighter jet that crashed in Syria, after it reportedly took part in air strikes against the militant group.

The Jordanian pilot was taken hostage by IS after it crashed on Wednesday, and the militant group published pictures allegedly showing him being held.

The US did not provide further details of the evidence it had, but said it would not tolerate attempts by IS "to misrepresent or exploit this unfortunate aircraft crash for their own purposes".

The F-16 fighter jet is the first coalition plane to have crashed after air strikes began in August, and IS initially claimed to have brought it down.

The Jordanian army said it holds IS and its supporters "responsible for the safety of the pilot and his life", in a statement read on state television.

Two relatives of the pilot, Flight Lieutenant Moaz Youssef al-Kasasbeh, said they had been told by the head of the Jordanian air force that the claims of the pilot being taken hostage were accurate.
News
The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said it had confirmed reports the plane was brought down near Raqqa, an IS stronghold in north-eastern Syria.
The Syrian government and US-led coalition regularly bomb IS targets in Raqqa province, which borders Turkey.

Air strikes continue

The US-led campaign against IS in Iraq and Syria carried out 10 air strikes in Syria on Wednesday and seven in Iraq, the US military said.

Eight of the strikes in Syria were focused on the contested border town of Kobani near the Turkish border.

Two other strikes hit a crude oil collection point near Dayr az Zawr and an IS weapons stockpile near Raqqa, the Combined Joint Task Force said.

The strikes in Iraq targeted IS units and property in al Qaim, Sinjar, Falluja and Tal Afar.

Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates have all taken part in or supported the strikes against IS targets in Syria, according to US Central Command.

Protests flare after Missouri police killing of armed black man

Police stand guard during a protest at Cathedral Basilica, after a man was fatally shot by a policeman, in St. Louis, Missouri, December 25, 2014.  REUTERS/Aaron P Bernstein



Police stand guard during a protest at Cathedral Basilica, after a man was fatally shot by a policeman, in St. Louis, Missouri, December 25, 2014.
BY AARON P. BERNSTEIN-Thu Dec 25, 2014 
Reuters(Reuters) - Protests flared into early Thursday in the St. Louis suburb where a white policeman fatally shot a black man who brandished a gun at a gas station on Tuesday night.

A group of protesters marched onto Interstate 170 in the city of Berkeley, Missouri, around 7 p.m. on Wednesday (0100 GMT on Thursday), blocking traffic for roughly 45 minutes. The demonstration followed a vigil at the Mobil On The Run gas station where the shooting occurred.
The site was just a few miles from the Ferguson street where a white police officer shot dead 18-year-old Michael Brown in August, fueling weeks of protest in the region and across the country.
Demonstrations that drew as many as 150 people were largely peaceful throughout the night, but at one point officers disrupted an attempt by several people to break into a beauty supply shop.
At least two people were taken into police custody. Authorities were unable to provide further details.
Black public officials in Missouri were at pains on Wednesday to distinguish the death of the suspect, whom they noted was holding a gun, from cases of unarmed black men who had been killed by police officers. The latter incidents have led to protests across the United States and bitter debate about how U.S. police forces treat non-white citizens.
"This is not a policeman in the city of Berkeley going out half-cocked," Berkeley Mayor Theodore Hoskins said at a news conference. "You could not even compare this with Ferguson."
Shortly after the shooting on Tuesday night, a crowd of up to 300 people gathered at the scene, where bricks and three fireworks were thrown, two of them at the roughly 50 officers at the scene, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said.
Two officers were injured and four people were arrested for assault, Belmar said.
The shooting occurred three days after a man summarily shot dead two officers in their patrol car in New York City, targeting them only because of the uniform they were wearing.
POLICE RELEASE VIDEO
The Berkeley encounter unfolded after the officer, a six-year veteran of the town's police department who was responding to a report of a theft, got out of his car to talk to two men at the gasoline station.
One of them pointed a loaded 9mm handgun at the officer, Belmar said. Police released an indistinct, distant surveillance video from the gas station, edited to end just before the shooting.
In the corner of the frame, one of the people at the station can be seen raising one or both arms in what might be a shooter's stance near the police car, although the footage is too dark and grainy to establish that the person is holding a gun.
Two other videos released later by St. Louis County Police were similarly ambiguous, recorded by security cameras that appear to have only restricted views of the scene.
The officer fired three shots, Belmar said, a sequence captured on one of the three videos. One bullet struck the man with the gun, whom paramedics declared dead at the scene, he said.
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper named him as 18-year-old Antonio Martin.
Police said they found a handgun with a defaced serial number at the scene.
The officer, who was not identified and was put on administrative leave, had been given a body camera in a pilot program but was not wearing it at the time of the shooting. The dashboard camera on the officer's car was also off.
Protests in Ferguson have taken place for months and spilled over into violence when a grand jury decided a month ago not to charge the police officer who shot Brown.
Demonstrations in cities across the country gained in momentum when a New York grand jury decided not to indict a police officer over the death of Eric Garner, a 43-year-old black man who died in July when police tackled him and put him in a choke hold.

(Additional reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington, Eric M. Johnson in Seattle, and Jonathan Allen in New York; Writing by Curtis Skinner; Editing by Edmund Klamann)
Corruption hampers effort to rebuild Gaza after summer conflict
Coupon plan fails to stop black market in cement, while too few materials are making it across border into strip

Gaza in DecemberNine-year-old Adham scrapes up concrete dust into his bag to sell as men haggle in the background over the price of a cart of black-market concrete.
Four months after the Gaza conflict, a Palestinian youth looks at a scene of devastation. Photograph: Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
The Guardian home
 in Gaza-Thursday 25 December 2014
The reconstruction of Gaza after this summer’s 50-day war with Israel is moving at a glacial pace with only a tiny amount of the promised rebuilding materials so far delivered.
Amid mounting criticism of the pace of the rebuilding effort, the Guardian has established that a controversial UN-designed mechanism to control the supply of building materials – and prevent them falling into the hands of the militant group Hamas – has been widely corrupted.
Corruption Hampers Effort to Rebuild Gaza After Summer Conflict by Thavam Ratna

Afghan cabinet delays stoke worry, frustration

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, center, sits next to Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, left, at an event for the Afghan Women’s Empowerment Grants Program in Kabul on Nov. 8. (Rahmat Gul/AP)

Pushing Ebola to the Brink of Gone in Liberia

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is fighting a grueling battle against the epidemic. But she's not winning plaudits at home.
Screen Shot 2014-12-23 at 9.41.12 PM






BY LAURIE GARRETTDECEMBER 24, 2014

Pushing Ebola to the Brink of Gone in Liberia MONROVIA, Liberia — As the Ebola epidemic waned in Liberia, the rainy season coincidentally ended, ushering in months of hotter, drier weather. And traditionally the dry season is party time, especially on the beaches of Atlantis and Mamba Point, where thousands of young urban adults living in Monrovia dance and mingle, day and night. Worried that the virus still lurks in her country and could readily spread among beach revelers, Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf ordered that the beaches be closed.
Pushing Ebola to the Brink of Gone in Liberia by Thavam Ratna

Sierra Leone imposes three-day Ebola lockdown

Channel 4 News
THURSDAY 25 DECEMBER 2014
Sierra Leone's north has been locked down over Christmas for at least three days in an attempt to contain the spread of the devastating Ebola virus.
News
Public gatherings have been banned and shops and markets will be closed for up to five days as officials try to contain the spread of the Ebola virus.

The Sierra Leone lockdown could last up to five days, and applies to all Christian and Muslim services due to be held in churches and mosques, except those held by Christians on Christmas day.

The lockdown is designed "to intensify the containment of the Ebola virus", Alie Kamara, resident minister for the Northern Region, told Agence France Presse.

Other parts of the country will be free to apply lockdowns as they see fit to help contain the virus.

No vehicles will be allowed on roads during the lockdown, except those involved in official Ebola assignments.
News
Sierra Leone declared a state of emergency in July, and in early December imposed restrictions on large Christmas and new year gatherings.

The Ebola epidemic has killed over 7,500 people, mostly in west Africa. A state of emergency has been in place in Sierra Leone since July.

Sierra Leone has reported more than 9,000 cases of Ebola, with over 2,400 people dying since the epidemic started.

The outbreak started in Guinea in early 2014 and has also gripped Liberia.

Sierra Leone has now overtaken Liberia as the country with the highest number of Ebola cases.

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

UN Chief wants Lanka to back probe



December 25, 2014
United Nations: UN chief Ban Ki-moon has asked Sri Lanka to cooperate with the UN-mandated probe into allegations of war crimes committed towards the end of the nearly three decades-long civil war, according to his spokesman.
“The Secretary-General has always encouraged the Government of Sri Lanka to comprehensively address the post-war agenda and the Secretary-General has also echoed the calls made by the High Commissioner for Human Rights, for the Government to cooperate with the ongoing human rights investigation,” Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, said at his daily briefing on Tuesday.
Both Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his rival Maithripala Sirisena, 63, have pledged in the run-up to the January 8 presidential polls that they would not cooperate with the UN-mandated investigation into the government’s 2009 defeat of the Tamil Tiger rebellion.
Both 69-year-old Rajapaksa and Sirisena have advocated local mechanisms to deal with rights abuses. Rajapaksa yesterday promised a fresh ‘transparent’ judicial probe into allegations that the army killed thousands of Tamil civilians towards the end of the nearly three decades-long civil war.
The promise of a probe by Rajapaksa is being seen as a response to similar pledges made by his main challenger Sirisena.
The report on Sri Lanka by the investigation team of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) will be taken up for discussion at the UN Human Rights Council on 25 March next year.
The 28th regular session of the UN Human Rights Council will be held from 2 to 27 March in Geneva and the report on Sri Lanka is part of the agenda.
In a resolution adopted in March 2014 on ‘Promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka’, the United Nations Human Rights Council requested the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to ‘undertake a comprehensive investigation into alleged serious violations and abuses of human rights and related crimes by both parties in Sri Lanka during the period covered by the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC)’.
The resolution also called for the probe to ‘establish the facts and circumstances of such alleged violations and of the crimes perpetrated with a view to avoiding impunity and ensuring accountability, with assistance from relevant experts and special procedures mandate holders’.
President Rajapaksa has called a snap election on 8 January, two years ahead of the schedule. The Tamil Tigers were defeated after their leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was killed by the Sri Lankan forces in 2009.
Sri Lanka has come under increased scrutiny from international organisations for its rights accountability during the last phase of the conflict. (PTI)

Extreme weather delays Sri Lanka's post-war reconstruction


Tamil people, who escaped Tamil Tigers rebels-held area following fighting between Sri Lanka army and Tamil Tigers, are seen inside a temporary refugee camp in Vavuniya, northern Sri Lanka February 23, 2009.
Reuters
Tamil people, who escaped Tamil Tigers rebels-held area following fighting between Sri Lanka army and Tamil Tigers, are seen inside a temporary refugee camp in Vavuniya, northern Sri Lanka February 23, 2009. REUTERS/Nir Elias/FilesBY AMANTHA PERERA
COLOMBO (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A series of extreme weather events in the past three years has held back already slow post-war reconstruction efforts in Sri Lanka’s Northern Province, officials and experts say.

An 11-month drought eased only in early December, and has been followed by monsoon-linked flooding that could cause additional delays.
This year’s long dry spell drove down agricultural production. Water shortages also hampered the building of thousands of houses to replace those destroyed in 2008 and 2009, during the last phase of the country’s 26-year war between the government and Tamil insurgents.
"The drought has been terrible - probably the worst in the last decade," said Rupavanthi Ketheeswaran, the top public official for Kilinochchi District, one of four that make up Northern Province.
The Sri Lanka Red Cross Society said the drought had been a major concern for re-housing efforts in 2014.
"The project was partly affected by a prolonged drought," the Red Cross said in an update early this month. "Shortage of both surface and ground water, and limited water supply from the local authorities and local suppliers delayed construction."
Only about a third of the 138,651 homes needed have been constructed so far, despite the war ending in May 2009.
Experts say extreme weather events - which are expected to increase as the planet warms - are putting conflict-affected communities across South Asia in harm’s way.
In the restive Rakhine State of western Myanmar, for example, aid officials say monsoon-related floods have periodically worsened the humanitarian situation.
Rising religious tensions have forced over 140,000 to flee their homes there, and aid agencies estimate that at least 800,000 people are in dire need of relief.
In 2010, over 300,000 in the state were affected by two cyclones. According to Pierre Péron, a spokesman for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Myanmar, over 40 percent of the population in Rakhine lives below the poverty line, and reoccurring extreme weather events are making their situation worse.

FARMERS HIT
In Sri Lanka, the drought has had serious repercussions for the farming sector in the north, with crop losses likely to exceed 30 percent.
In the first half of this year, the rice harvest was only 122,000 metric tonnes, less than half of the targeted 300,000 metric tonnes, said Sivapatham Sivakumar, director of agriculture at the Northern Provincial Council.
Overall, agricultural production is expected to fall by around 40 percent this year, with rice production contracting some 30 percent to a six-year low.
The drought’s impact on agriculture has been widely felt in Northern Province where around a third of the population of just over 1 million depends on it for income. About a quarter of the population are displaced people returning home after the war.
"There have been a lot of loan defaulters in the last year, because people don’t have the money to meet repayment obligations," said Murugesu Kayodaran, a rehabilitation officer for the Kilinochchi Divisional Secretariat who looks after the needs of returnees.
Poverty in the region is among the highest in the nation. Mullaitivu, where the war raged worst, ranks as the poorest district with a poverty level of 28.8 percent, over four times the national average of 6.7 percent, government statistics show.
Despite this, people in the province tried to buy water for reconstruction purposes during the drought, the Red Cross said. In some areas the water available was not suitable for construction due to a high level of salt, making it unsuitable for mixing concrete, the agency added.

MONSOON FLOODS
Officials like Kayodaran and Sivakumar worry that some of those affected by drought will lose their farm plots or their homes if they cannot repay loans.
"Land was the only asset that most of the returnees had to seek loans on - now they run the risk of losing that," Kayodaran said.
This year’s drought is the latest in a series of back-to-back extreme weather events that have hit Sri Lanka’s former conflict zone in the last three years. There were two major droughts in mid-2010 and late 2012, as well as heavy flooding in 2011 and 2012. 
The end of this year’s drought has now given way to floods, caused by the onset of the North East Monsoon that became active in mid-December.
The rains have brought severe flooding, with almost half a million people affected across the country, including in the Northern regions, according to the Disaster Management Centre.
Ahead of the monsoon season, which runs through February, the Red Cross warned rains could cause further delays to home reconstruction in the north.
(Reporting by Amantha Perera; editing by Megan Rowling)
Both candidates' positions contrary to Tamil interests - TCSF
Embedded image permalink



 23 December 2014
The Tamil Civil Society Forum (TCSF) has refused to endorse either presidential candidate in the upcoming Sri Lankan elections.
In a statement released on Tuesday, TCSF said that Tamil suffering under Mahinda Rajapaksa affirmed that "the question of Tamil people voting for the incumbent President just does not arise," while also highlighting that regime change has not historically resulted in improvements for Tamils.
"Both main candidates have not and do not want to take a position on those issues that affect the Tamil people. In fact they are in denial of those problems and have taken positions contrary to Tamil interests. Hence the Tamil people do not have to take a collective stance at the forthcoming elections. To explicitly call for a vote for either of the main candidates will be tantamount to accepting a unitary constitution and to rejecting international investigations," the statement said.
See below for TCSF's full statement.

Tamils should freely exercise their franchise at the upcoming Sri Lanka Presidential Election

Embedded image permalinkWednesday, December 24, 2014

Tamils should freely exercise their franchise at Presidential ElectionGlobal Tamil Forum (GTF) strongly urges the Tamil people in Sri Lanka to use every vote carefully during the January 8 Presidential Election.

Tamil people have a long history of voting based on principled considerations. The upcoming Presidential election is no different.

GTF is fully aware that in the post-independent Sri Lanka, Tamil people have continuously lost their rights under a flawed majoritarian electoral system. Their desire to have a degree of control in the Tamil majority areas was never granted, despite repeated democratic expressions of their wishes through all available electoral means.
Nevertheless, from our perspective, whether Sri Lanka should continue in the same path or whether change should be taken at this juncture to stop and reverse this trajectory is the fundamental question facing the electorate.
Thus, GTF urges every Tamil speaking person, up and down the country, to fully participate in this decision and to vote in this Presidential election.
-ENDS-

கஜேந்திரகுமாரின் சொத்துக்கள் பேசும் அதிகாரவர்க்க அரசியல்

Gajendrakumar_PonnampalamEmbedded image permalink
இனியொரு டாட் கொம்உலகத்தில் அதிகாரவர்கத்திற்கு எதிராக ஆயுதம் தாங்கிப் போராடி கடந்த ஐனித்து ஆண்டுகளாக இனப்படுகொலைக்கு உள்ளாக்கப்படுபவர்கள் மக்கள் பற்றுள்ள இடதுசாரிகளே. நமது சாபக்கேடு இலங்கையின் பெரும்பாலான இடதுசாரிகள் வாக்குப்பொறுக்கிகளாகிவிட்டதே. பாராளுமன்ற ஜனநாயகம் என்பது அவ்வப்போது மக்களை உணர்ச்சிவயப்படுத்தி வாக்குகளைத் திடட்டிக்கொள்வதே. வேட்பாளர்கள் வாக்குப்பொறுக்குவதற்குரிய பணத்தை பெரும் வணிக நிறுவனங்களிடமிருந்து பெற்றுக்கொள்கின்றனர். சிலவேளைகளில் அன்னிய நாடுகளும் உளவு நிறுவனங்களும் தமது நலன்களுக்காக வாக்குப் பொறுக்கும் வேட்பாளர்களதும் கட்சியினதும் பின்புலத்தில் செயற்படுகின்றனர்.
இதனால் மக்கள் பணம்படைத்த இரண்டு கொள்ளைக்காரர்களில் ஒருவரைத் தெரிவு செய்யும் நிலைக்குத் தள்ளப்படுகின்றனர். இதனையே முதலாளித்துவ அமைப்பில் ஜனநாயகம் என்று அழைத்துக்கொள்கின்றனர்.
மக்கள் விரும்பாவிடினும் ஒருவரை அல்லது ஒரு கட்சியைத் தெரிவுசெய்யுமாறு நிர்பந்திக்கும் ஜனநாயகத்தை முன்வைத்து மக்களின் உள்ளார்ந்த விருப்பு வெறுப்புக்களை அறிந்துகொள்ள முடியாது.
கடந்த நூற்றாண்டில் பிரித்தானிய உளவுத்துறையான MI5 உம், அமெரிக்க உளவுத்துறையான CIA உம் இணைந்து அதிகமாகச் செலவுசெய்த பணம் கம்யூனிசத்திற்கு எதிராகப் பொய்பிரச்சாரம் செய்வதற்கானதே. கம்யூனிசத்திற்கு எதிராகப் பல இனப்படுகொலைகள் நடைபெற்றிருக்கின்றன. பல தனி நபர்கள் கொலை செய்யப்பட்டிருக்கின்றனர். பலர் போலிக் குற்றங்களின் பேரில் சிறையிலடைக்கப்பட்டனர்.
ஏகாதிபத்திய நாடுகளின் பணபலத்தில் போலிக் கம்யூனிஸ்டுக்களை உருவாக்கி வாக்குப் பொறுக்கிகளாக மாற்றி மக்கள் மத்தியில் கம்யூனிசத்திற்கு எதிரான வெறுப்பு இன்னொரு முனையில் திட்டமிட்டுத் தோற்றுவிக்கப்பட்டது.
சமூகத்தையும் அதன் இயக்கத்தையும் தர்க்கரீதியாக அணுகுவதே கம்யூனிசத்தின் தொடட்க்கப்புள்ளி. அனைத்துமே கடவுளின் செயல் எனக் கோவில்களுக்குள் முடக்கிவைக்கப்பட்ட சமூகத்திற்கு உலகத்தை அறிமுகப்படுத்தியது கம்யூனிசமே.
உலகின் வெற்றிபெற்ற தேசிய விடுதலை இயக்கங்கள் அனைத்தும் கம்யூனிச இயக்கங்களே. இன்றும் உலகின் அத்தனை உளவு நிறுவனங்களும் அதிகார வர்க்கமும் இணைந்து அழிக்க முடியாமலிருப்பது குர்திஸ்தான் மக்களின் தேசியவிடுதலைப் போராட்டம். இப்போராட்டத்தை குஸ்தீஸ் தொழிலாளர் கட்சி (PKK) என்ற கம்யூனிஸ்ட் கட்சியே தலைமை தாங்குகிறது.
ஆனால் யாழ்ப்பாணத்தின் மேட்டுக்குடி அரசியல் வாதிகள் தமிழர்களைப் பின் தங்கிய மந்தைகளாகவே வைத்திருக்க விரும்புகின்றனர். தேசிய விடுதலைப் போராட்டத்தை கம்யூனிஸ்டுக்கள் தலைமைதாங்கினால் அது வெற்றிபெற்றுவிடுமோ என்ற அச்சம் அவர்களின் பேச்சுக்களில் வெளிப்படுகிறது. ‘அகில இலங்கை’ தமிழ்க் காங்கிரஸ் (General Secretary of the All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC)) இன் செயலளர் எனத் தனது linkedin பக்கத்தில் தன்னைத் தானே அறிமுகம் செய்யும் கொழும்பு பணக்கார மேட்டுக்குடியின் குறிப்பிடத்தக்க உறுப்பினரான கஜேந்திரகுமார் பொன்னம்பலம் தமிழர்கள் கம்யூனிசத்தை என்றுமே ஏற்றுக்கொள்ள மாட்டார்கள் எனத் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
கொழும்பைச் சுற்றியுள்ள கஜேந்திரகுமார் பொன்னம்பலத்தின் சொத்துக்களிலிருந்து அவரின் அமெரிக்க ஏகாதிபத்தியச் சார்புக் கருத்துக்கள் வரை தேசியம் பேசவில்லை. அவை விதேசியத்தின் துருத்தலான குறியீடுகள். இதனால் கஜேந்திரகுமாரின் கம்யூனிச எதிர்ப்பு வியப்பிற்குரியவை அல்ல. தேசியத்திலும் அதிகமாக அதிகாரவர்கத்தை நேசித்தால் மட்டுமே கஜேந்திரகுமார் தனது சொத்துக்களையும், ஏகாதிபத்திய விசுவாசத்தையும் காப்பாற்றிக்கொள்ள முடியும். இதனால் தான் கஜேந்திரகுமாரின் தாத்தா ஜீ.ஜீ.பொன்னம்பலம் பேரினவாத்தித்திற்கு நுளைவாசலக அமைந்த மேற்கின் அடிமை அரசான டீ.எஸ்.சேனாநாயக்கவின் அமைச்சரவையில் அங்கம் வகித்தார்.

Does the North of Sri Lanka need a ‘Movement Joint’?

Photo courtesy Getty Images, by Buddhika Weerasinghe
GroundviewsOne of the features about the run up to the January 2015 Presidential election is the uncertainty about how the Northern voter will vote. This short article cannot cover all the nuances of the ‘national’ problem as it is called. However at this time of elections, it may be pertinent to consider two approaches towards seeking national integrity (i.e. integrating the South and the North).
Structural and geo-technical engineers know that when a long building is constructed especially on weak soil, it is almost mandatory to have a movement joint to separate the building into two. To the non-engineer that building will appear and function as a single integral structure. But careful inspection will reveal that there are double columns and beams at the joint, to allow one part of the building to settle differentially with respect to the other. Such differential settlement is imperceptible to users of the building, but real; and it allows a long building to exist without developing unsightly cracks. Even reservoirs can be constructed with movement joints; the 10,000 cubic meter Jubilee Reservoir which supplies Colombo with water from the Kelani River has a movement joint right through the middle of its length – but it is nevertheless a single integral reservoir.
The alternative to providing a movement joint is to have a very stiff structure that somehow tries to force the entire building to settle uniformly. Most structural engineers would not opt for this, because uneven soil conditions will eventually cause differential settlements (in spite of the stiff structure) and generate unsightly cracks in the building – this creates de facto ‘separations’ while compromising the integrity of the building in the process.
The approach of Southern politicians to governing the North seems to be similar to the ‘stiff structure’ approach, presumably because tight control is seen to be the antidote to separatist tendencies.  This approach does not appear to be working and is probably counterproductive, fuelling the very separatism it tries to suppress. And national integrity is showing cracks in various forms – those who have eyes to see can see them. At a time when the country goes to the hustings, it may be wise for the entire Southern polity (and especially their elected representatives) to think about switching to the ‘movement joint’ approach.
There is probably a good case for Southerners to give their Northern counterparts greater freedom of ‘movement’. Northerners are very independent by nature. Although the North is accused of receiving educational and other favours from colonial rule, the Northerners themselves have tended to preserve their culture (rather than capitulating to colonial culture) more than those in the South. For example, it is Northerners who run virtually all our vegetarian restaurants. So at a time when Southerners themselves are trying to forge a distinctive Sri Lankan identity rather than aping the West (which is another ‘national’ problem of a different sort), it may be of value to take a leaf out of the Northerners’ book. In other words, the Northerners may be the vanguard for the entire nation to develop an authentic Sri Lankan identity, as they arguably were (together with Southern leaders) when we got independence from the British. In order to be part of this vanguard, the Northerners need greater freedom; and the North needs a movement joint to settle differentially, while preserving national integrity.
The writer is a Chartered Structural Engineer.