Peace for the World

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

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Resolute Governance And Demise Of Boycott Philosophers

Colombo Telegraph
By S. Sivathasan -January 21, 2015
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
AAAA
“Those who make revolution half way, only dig their own graves”.
Relentless and Resolute
A revolution rightly called or miscalled, glorious or not, needs first to be consolidated. Disaster can result otherwise. A bloodless revolution can be stamped out in blood. The leader who was elevated as Prime Minister in 1956, was swept to that position by a demagogic wave. It became a tragic irony that the assassin had in him the same demagogic forces. He was a Bhikku, a swabasha teacher and an ayurvedic physician. To avert a repetition after the second bloodless one in 2015, the revolution needs consummation with no loss of time. Compassion can be misplaced strategy. Complacency may be ill advised default. Relentless pursuit savours of realism.
Dr. N M Perera attributed IRRESOLUTENESS of the leaders for the failure of the 1962 coup. Never ever may it be said that the second revolution of 2015, had an inglorious end for the same reason. Karl Marx has pointed out that the ruling class will never depart the stage voluntarily. It has to be pushed out. Rephrasing Lenin’s words to suit the Sri Lankan context, liberation of the oppressed minorities is impossible without destroying the repressive apparatus of the state. To the Tamils, the use of extra-legal armed groups has been the worst feature of oppression by the previous government. They have to be in preventive custody at the earliest, for Tamil turnout to reach 85% in April 2015.
In 1688, the bloodless revolution in England shifted power from monarch to Parliament. The arrangement has not changed since then. In Sri Lanka power has shifted from President, Family and Dynasty to the people and their representatives in Parliament. This change of 9, January 2015 is destined to remain if infanticide is precluded.
Tamil Leadership and Support to Government                              Read More

[ புதன்கிழமை, 21 சனவரி 2015, 12:19.02 PM GMT ]
நாட்டில் இதுவரை கடந்த அரசின் ஊழல் மோசடி தொடர்பாக 30 ஆயிரம் முறைப்பாடுகள் கிடைக்கப்பெற்றுள்ளது.
எவராலும் இந்த மோசடி சம்பந்தமான விசாரனைகளை தடுத்து நிறுத்த முடியாது.
த.தே.கூ தனது நிலைப்பாட்டில் மிக தெளிவாக உள்ளது அதேபோல் ஜனாதிபதி மைத்திரிபால சிறிசேன மற்றும் பிரதமர் தெளிவாக உள்ளார்கள் இவ்வாறு ஹெல உறுமய தலைவர் அத்துரலிய ரத்ன தேரர் நேற்று பாராளுமன்றத்தில் தெரிவித்தார்.
நேற்று நடைபெற்ற பாராளுமன்ற முதல் அமர்வில் பேசிய தேரர் மேலும் தெரிவிக்கையில், அபிவிருத்தி என் போர்வையில் ஊழல் மோசடிகள் தொடர்பில் அதுவரை 30ஆயிரம் முறைப்பாடுகள் குவிந்துள்ளதெனவும் இவைகள் அணைத்தும் முறையாக விசாரணை செய்யப்பட்டு சட்ட நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்படும் பிரதமரோ அவரின் அமைச்சரவையோ அதை தடுத்து நிறுத்த முடியாது.
கடந்த ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல் நீதியாக நடைபெறவில்லை, மாறாக அணைத்து அரச வளங்களும், உத்தியோகஸ்தர்களும், அரச ஊடகங்களும் இணைத்துக் கொண்டே தேர்தல் பிரசாங்களை மேற்கொண்டது.
யுத்தம் தொடர்பாக அதிகமாக பேசப்படுகின்றது.யுத்த வெற்றி தனிப்பட்ட நபரின் மூலம் பெற்ற வெற்றி இல்லை இந்த வெற்றி பலரின் கூட்டு முயற்சியால் பெறப்பட்டது.
சரத்பொன்சேகா ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் போட்டியிட்ட காரணத்தினால் சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டார் அவருக்கு அநீதி இழைக்கப்பட்டது.இது சரியா என இந்த பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் சிந்திக்க வேண்டும் அவர் இழந்த அணைத்தும் மீண்டும் அவருக்கு கிடைக்கவேண்டும்.
த.தே.கூ உடன்படிக்கை சம்பந்தமாக பேசப்பட்டது த.தே.கூ ஜனநாயகத்திற்கு திரும்பியுள்ள ஒரு அமைப்பாகும். அவர்களை மக்களின் ஆதவை பெற்று பாராளுமன்றத்திற்கு வந்துள்ளனர் அவர்கள் மிக தெளிவாக உள்ளனர்.
ஜனாதிபதியும் பிரதமரும் மிக தெளிவாக அவர்களின் நிலைப்பாட்டில் உள்ளனர். ஆகவே இங்கு ரகசிய ஒப்பந்தம் ஏதும் கிடையாது. தமிழர் தேசிய கூட்டமைப்பு இன்று பொது இடத்திற்கு வந்துள்ளது.
ஆகவே வடக்கு மக்களின் பிரச்சினைகள் குறித்து நாம் கவனம் எடுக்க வேண்டியுள்ளவர்களாக இருக்கின்றோம் வடக்கு பிரச்சினைகளுக்கு முன் உரிமை கொடுக்க வேண்டியது நமது கடமையாகும் இவ்வாறு பாராளுமன்றில் தேரர் கூறினார்.

Racial Discrimination; Enact Laws To Protect All Citizens

Colombo Telegraph
By Nagananda Kodituwakku –January 21, 2015
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Nagananda Kodituwakku
During the recently concluded election campaign for Executive Presidency, people witnessed extremely disturbing racist remarks directed at ethnic minorities, particularly against Tamils and Muslims, by the former PresidentMahinda Rajapaksa, inciting racism, with intention of swing majority Sinhalese voters towards him.
Post election Rajapaksa declared that the majority of his voters were Sinhalese and that his defeat was solely a result of the ‘terrorists’ supporting the main opposition candidate. This assertion is grossly unfounded and uncalled for as it has been intended to provoke controversy and racism amongst the people.
The people of the northern and eastern provinces overwhelmingly rejected his ‘divide and rule’ doctrine, whilst the substantial number of voters in the southern demographic voted against him for his blatant failure to observe the notion of good governance. His unpopularity stems from the undermining of the Judiciary, the lack of respect to the Rule of Law and the above all condoning corruption at an unfathomable scale.
UKThe modern civilised world promotes freedom of speech; nevertheless, racial remarks direct or otherwise are not tolerated at all, especially by individuals holding high public office.
Sri Lanka can learn a lost from the proven vibrant democracy, the UK, the mother of social equality, a country with total population of 64 million. This is a good example where ethnic minorities from over 60 countries live in total harmony with the majority white community.
In the UK a zero tolerance system exists for any form of discrimination. The laws prevalent are comprehensive and discrimination of any person on race, colour, nationality, ethnic or national origin, is absolutely forbidden and it covers education, employment, vocational training and access to goods, and other services as well. The relevant laws have been designed in such a way to cover four main types of racial discrimination, which include all forms of victimization and harassment. It also prohibits stirring up hatred against a person or social or social group and all authorities are required by law to eliminate unlawful racial discrimination and to promote equality of opportunity and good relations between people of different racial groups.
The effect of law is far reaching as it includes provisions that should apply to all schools and other higher education institutions to produce race equality policies, with a written statement promoting equality.
The new administration elected to office must not show a blind eye to such dated and immoral ideology, which permits a social hierarchy where the majority dominate. Now given the opportunity the new regime must introduce political correctness by enacting stringent penal provisions by law against any form of racial abuse or discrimination whether verbal or physical with no exception.

RSF AND JDS URGE NEW PRESIDENT TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST JOURNALISTS


RSF and JDS urge new president to end violence against journalists
PUBLISHED ON TUESDAY 20 JANUARY 2015.
Reporters Without BordersIn the wake of Sri Lanka’s 8 January presidential election, Reporters Without Borders and Journalists for Democracy in Sri Lanka (JDS) call on the new president, Maithripala Sirisena, to end the policy of violence against journalists that was pursued by his predecessor, Mahinda Rajapaksa, and to combat impunity for such violence.
The two organizations welcome the end of rule by the Rajapaksa brothers, who had been responsible for a great deal of violence against journalists since 2004. At the same time, they will monitor the new government’s actions closely, as it includes supporters of the previous regime. The violence continued in 2014, when the media were repeatedly the target of obstruction and attacks during the run-up to the elections, a period also marked by political violence.
In one of the latest cases, Sampath Samarakoon, the editor of the Vikalpa news website and secretary of the Free Media Movement (one of the last media freedom NGOs still operating in Sri Lanka), was attacked by armed men and the urban council chairman in the southern town of Hambantota while participating in a peaceful demonstration on 21 December.
The FMM said the urban council official was acting with the approval of the authorities and the government. Although told about the violence, the police did not intervene.
A group of men attacked Thisara Saman, a reporter for Hiru TV and the newspaper Ada, while he was covering a demonstration by civil society groups “Against violence, for life” in the northern town of Eppawala on 5 December.
K.W. Janaranjana, the editor of the newspaper Ravaya, was questioned by the Criminal Investigation Department on 9 December over an article based on information from an unidentified intelligence source referring to an unpublished poll that put Sirisena ahead of Rajapaksa.
Derana TV news editor Shehan Baranage was fired at the start of December as a result of a complaint against the TV station by sports minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage, after the minister walked out of one of the station’s political programmes because he was embarrassed by a question.
Mahinda Rajapaksa’s election defeat is not as yet enough to raise hopes of an improvement in media freedom in Sri Lanka,” said Benjamin Ismaïl, the head of the Reporters Without Borders Asia-Pacific desk.
The run-up to the election provided further examples of the former president’s contempt for the news media. Violence against journalists, smear campaigns against media and cyber-attacks on Tamil news websites based abroad increased steadily during Rajapaksa’s two terms. We call on his successor to adopt concrete measures that demonstrate a radical break with the previous regime’s repressive policies.
Rajapaksa brothers, predators of press freedom
Ever since his reelection in January 2010 – a year after the civil war with the Tamil Tiger rebels was officially declared to be over – President Rajapaksa had ruled with an iron hand, and with the help of his brother, defence minister Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
Added to the Reporters Without Borders list of “Predators of Press Freedom,” the Rajapaksa brothers did not hesitate to phone journalists and threaten them when they thought the journalists were being too critical.
Under their control, the military watched and threatened the Tamil media in the north of the country, including the newspaper Uthayan, whose headquarters was surrounded last May after it published articles about a massacre of Tamils in 2009.
The Free Media Movement (FMM) and Purawesi Bayala organized a candle-lit vigil in Colombo on 5 January as part of the “Black January” campaign to honour the memory of journalists who have been murdered or disappeared.
The participants included relatives and friends of Dharmeratnam “Taraki” Sivaram, a journalist murdered in April 2005, Sunday leader editor Lasantha Wickrematunga, who was murdered in January 2009, and Prageeth Eknaligoda, a cartoonist and Sunday Leader columnist who disappeared in January 2010.
Reporters Without Borders, which repeatedly pressed the government to shed light on Eknaligoda’s disappearance, highlighted his case in the new campaign against impunity, called #Fightimpunity, that it launched last November.
Sri Lanka is ranked 165th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
Visit Journalists for Democracy in Sri Lanka website here

DRUG BARON 'WELE SUDA' PAID Rs 2.5M a month to COLOMBO MP

By Premalal Wijeratne-2015-01-21
Drug kingpin Wele Suda, who was recently arrested in Pakistan and subsequently deported to Sri Lanka, has testified to the CID that he paid
Rs 2.5 million a month to a Colombo District UPFA MP as commission.
The CID, having obtained a detention order on the suspect for three months, is currently interrogating him on the details on how the operation was carried out. Wele Suda has informed the CID that for the past two years he had sent container loads of drugs to the country with the support of senior police officers and the UPFA MP who helped him not only clear the drugs through Customs but also distribute it around Colombo and other areas.
With information on the drug business unravelling fast, Ceylon Today learns that the politician who was at the centre of the drug ring has been trying to use his political clout to escape prosecution.
The CID is also in possession of details involving powerful figures in the country who had received money from Wele Suda and had subsequently divested it into their various other businesses.
The CID is also conducting investigations into the conduct of Wele Suda's wife to determine whether she assisted him in distributing the drugs and money in the country.
It is learnt that the suspect has escaped the country with the assistance of a senior official attached to the security forces while he had several cases of narcotics lodged against him at the High Courts.
The CID has requested assistance from Interpol and Sri Lankan Embassies and High Commissions abroad to crack down on the money trail which kept the drug business afloat. Interpol is also working on getting information on Wele Suda's accounts in foreign banks.
A senior police officer also revealed that the suspect has also shed light on how the communication network between him in Pakistan and his various associates in Sri Lanka and around the world worked.

De Facto Chief Justice Pieris Agrees To Step Down

Colombo Telegraph
January 21, 2015 
De Facto Chief Justice Mohan Pieris has agreed to step down from the post, Health Minister Dr. Rajitha Senaratne told journalists in Colombo a short while ago.
De facto Chief Justice Mohan Pieris
De facto Chief Justice Mohan Pieris
Dr. Senarathne said that de facto CJ Pieris had informed Prime MinisterRanil Wickremesinghe that he would step down from the post soon.
Mohan Pieris was appointed as CJ by the Ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa after the illegal removal of the CJ Shirani Bandaranayake.
Serving Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake had not been removed as per proper procedure, and therefore, there was no vacancy. “Parliament had not passed an appropriate resolution – a proper address to the President seeking the removal of the Chief Justice on the basis of the findings of the Parliamentary Select Committee. What it passed was an old one which had set the impeachment process in motion.” TNA MP, lawyer M.A.Sumanthirantold media.
Related posts;

A Yardstick for change

Triumphalist memorials like this do not help build a lasting peace

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice19/01/2015

Sri Lanka has a new President, Maithripala Sirisena. He was elected, in significant part, by a population appalled by the racism, the slide into authoritarianism, the systematic violation of human rights, and the war crimes committed by the previous regime (as well as its increasingly flagrant nepotism and corruption).
[ புதன்கிழமை, 21 சனவரி 2015, 02:38.48 PM GMT ]
பதுளை, மடுல்சீமை பொலிஸ் பிரிவிற்குட்பட்ட கொக்காகல பிரதேசத்தில் வீடொன்றில் மறைத்து வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்த கெப் ரக வாகனத்தை பொலிஸார் இன்று மீட்டுள்ளனர்.
பொருளாதார அபிவிருத்தி அமைச்சுக்கு சொந்தமான வாகனமே இவ்வாறு மீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
வீட்டின் உரிமையாளர், அந்த வாகனத்தை வீட்டுக்கு ஓட்டிவந்த சாரதி ஆகியோரை கைது செய்துள்ளதாக பொலிஸார் தெரிவித்தனர்.
இந்த வாகனம், கடந்த ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலின் போது தேர்தல் பிரசாரத்துக்காக கொண்டு வரப்பட்டுள்ளதாக ஆரம்பக்கட்ட விசாரணைகளிலிருந்து தெரியவந்துள்ளது என்று மடுல்சீமை பொலிஸார் தெரிவித்தனர்.

Will Mahinda Now Look Towards UN And US For Relief?

| by Upul Joseph Fernando
( January 21, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) ”The media does not highlight the threats hurled at my supporters. The media behaves in a manner as if it does not know such things” – Mahinda Rajapaksa tells BBC Sandeshaya Channel from Medamulana after his defeat. When in power Mahinda labelled the BBC and the international media as contractors of the LTTE. When the United States brought a resolution before the UNHRC against the Rajapaksa government in March 2013, Mahinda’s government disrupted the BBC Tamil Service. He censored all news that was critical of his administration. That was a violation of the agreement between the BBC and the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation. It appears that Mahinda has forgotten that past.
So now he claims that the media ignores attacks on his supporters.
This scenario recalls to memory, the services rendered by the alternative media spearheaded by Lasantha Wickremetunga in the past. Lasantha launched repeated attacks on the Chandrika Kumaratunga administration from 1994 – 2005. When Chandrika lost power and new President Mahinda Rajapaksa launched attacks on Chandrika, Lasantha’s ‘Sunday Leader’ newspaper gave space for Chandrika’s views too. If Lasantha was alive today, he would have given adequate space for Mahinda to highlight the attacks and issues faced by Mahinda and his supporters. Sadly Lasantha was mysteriously killed during Mahinda’s regime. On the instructions of Mahinda, the ‘Irudina’ and ‘Sunday Leader’ publications of Lasantha was bought over by a businessman close to his government.
When a new government is elected, any attacks on the supporters of the defeated regime are usually reported by the alternative media. Also when new governments take office media institutions which indulge in business transactions with governments attempt to renew such links with the new government. Hence, they fear to report attacks on supporters of the defeated government. The only media that would act fearlessly is an alternative media as they do not contract businesses with governments.
This scenario recalls to memory, the services rendered by the alternative media spearheaded by Lasantha Wickremetunga in the past. Lasantha launched repeated attacks on the Chandrika Kumaratunga administration from 1994 – 2005. When Chandrika lost power and new President Mahinda Rajapaksa launched attacks on Chandrika, Lasantha’s ‘Sunday Leader’ newspaper gave space for Chandrika’s views too. If Lasantha was alive today, he would have given adequate space for Mahinda to highlight the attacks and issues faced by Mahinda and his supporters. Sadly Lasantha was mysteriously killed during Mahinda’s regime. On the instructions of Mahinda, the ‘Irudina’ and ‘Sunday Leader’ publications of Lasantha was bought over by a businessman close to his government.
It is no surprise therefore that Mahinda, by going to suppress the alternate media while fondling the state media today has no media whatsoever. Mahinda never dreamt that he would end up back in the opposition. Had he thought in that direction, he would have realized the need of an alternative media, human rights, non-governmental organizations that spoke of democracy, the United States and West were important. When he was in the opposition from 1989 – 1994, he sought relief from the alternate media, NGOs, UNHRC and the western countries. That was why Mahinda went before the UNHRC to lodge complaints against the then administration. Upon assuming office as President, Mahinda erased that past from his memory.
David Gladstone divulges Mahinda’s tattling…
If the UNP and Maithripala cause injustice to him tomorrow, he has only two places to make representations. First is the judiciary. But today he cannot go before the judiciary he once destroyed. Why? It was reported that he destroyed the independence of the judiciary. Therefore, how could Mahinda expect justice from a judiciary that is reported to be partial considering the past history? The second place he could go is the embassies of the west. When Mahinda was in the opposition during the Premadasa administration, Mahinda brought the issues faced by then opposition before David Gladstone, the former British High Commissioner in Colombo. Gladstone has recently divulged to the media how Mahinda divulged facts and information as an opposition MP to him. During the Rajapaksa regime it bitterly criticized the British High Commissioner in Colombo. Having won the terrorist war in 2009, the British High Commission in Colombo was pelted with stones and tomatoes.
It must be recalled that when British High Commissioner in Colombo, John Rankin stated in his website in 2012 that the government should withdraw troops from the North, Rankin was summoned by External Affairs Minister, Prof. G. L. Peiris and reprimanded. In the recent past, the former United States Ambassador to Colombo was accused of bribing government ministers by offering US dollars to overthrow the Rajapaksa government and urged the US to remove her from office. The UNHRC Commissioner, Navi Pillay was insulted. Allegations were also levelled at the incumbent UNHRC Commissioner.
Now where could Mahinda, the Rajapaksas’ and their supporters go to lodge complaints about injustices caused to them? The country eagerly views that situation.

( The writer is an editor of Mawbima, a daily based in Colombo) 

Rs. 30 m car to Chichi from Bud Harsha of Negombo!

rohitha red
Harsha de Silva alias Bud Harsha of Negombo, who is infamous for budding vehicles, gave a ETR car worth Rs. 30 million to former president Mahinda Rajapaksa’s youngest son Rohith alias Chichi. He gave the gift as a mark of gratitude for getting clearance for 40 containers containing cars in parts he had brought from Japan with the payment of a minimum customs duty.
Chichi has used the gifted car by using the fake number-plate WP-KE 1391. This number-plate was not issued by the Department of Motor Traffic. The vehicle met with an accident, and Harsha obtained a Rs. 03 m accident compensation, through Rohitha, using the engine and chassis numbers of the car. Now, this car has disappeared without a trace.

Corruption: Are There Adequate Laws To Hold Rajapaksa Accountable ?

Colombo Telegraph
By R.M.B Senanayake –January 21, 2015
R.M.B. Senanayake
R.M.B. Senanayake
Are there adequate laws to hold the Ex-President and Ministers accountable for financial malpractices
Although there is much hype about corruption and the need to bring to book the corrupt Ministers, the Ex-President and his family; under what laws can they be financially accountable? In the case of fraud or embezzlement of funds there is the Penal Code and the common law offences. But is there a law governing or regulating financial management or financial accountability in the State?
Mahinda Namal Wimal
The prevailing Financial Regulations are those coming down from colonial times when the scope of government was much less and where the power to spend money was entirely with the Secretaries (called Permanent Secretaries then). They were designated the Chief Accounting Officers of the Ministries which constituted a cluster of departments engaged in closely related functions. The Heads of the Departments were designated as Accounting Officers for their departments. The Ministers were not referred to in the Financial Regulations. The financial powers which included the decisions to buy goods and services and award contracts were vested only with Secretaries and Heads of Departments. They were expected to call for competitive tenders’ or quotations before making any purchases of goods or services. The tender procedure required them to select the best tenderer. These officials were permanent officials of the public service, selected on merit and not political appointments by the President or the Minister. So they had the independence to act according to the principles laid down in the Financial Regulations. The situation changed after 1956 and the constitutional changes of 1972. Effective power even in financial matters came to be exercised by the Ministers and the President instead of the Secretaries who were now their creatures. I remember once when I served in the former Ministry of Food the then Permanent Secretary K. Alvapillai writing a minute to the then Minister J.R Jayewerdene that financial matters relating to rice purchases were not his function but that of the Permanent Secretary.Read More

The Putins of the world should be terrified by what just happened in Sri Lanka

Sirisena supporters with posterSri Lanka Security Forces
Updated by  on January 20, 2015-WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2015
VoxIn retrospect, former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa probably regrets his decision to campaign for reelection on the slogan that voters should stick with his administration because he was a "known devil" and his opponent was an "unknown angel."
At the time, Rajapaksa's hold on power had seemed unshakable; his repressive, authoritarian government, rock solid. But on January 8, he was peacefully voted out — and, just as surprisingly, failed in what appears to have been an attempted coup to remain in office. Rajapaksa's loss of power shocked the world, and not just because so many expected him to hold on.

Helping Sri Lanka’s New Democracy – NYT Opinion

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NYT-Photo Credit Jacob Stead
Sri Lanka BriefBy RYAN GOODMANJAN-20/01/2015
Sri Lanka’s voters shocked themselves and the world this month by tossing out their president, who crushed the Tamil insurgency in 2009 and then led the country, along with his brother as defense secretary, to the brink of authoritarianism. The new president has promised to restore freedom of the press, independence of judges, and the rights of religious and ethnic minorities.
Democracy advocates, including Secretary of State John Kerry, say this is the country’s most important chance to open a new chapter in more than a decade.
But the country must make sure that members of the ousted regime do not return to power and that the new government can secure its authority. The United States — and only the United States — can do something to help make that happen.
The former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, and his brother, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, aren’t politically dead yet. Critical parliamentary elections are scheduled for April. The new president, Maithripala Sirisena, rode to electoral victory on the back of a diverse group of parties. He must now consolidate his power so that democratic reform can go ahead.
What can the United States do to help? Mr. Kerry said the United States would take up longstanding human rights concerns with the new government. The State Department has spearheaded the creation of a United Nations investigation into war crimes committed under the Rajapaksa regime during the country’s civil war, which lasted from 1983 to 2009.
But that inquiry offers both too much and too little at this point. Too much, because pushing for full, sweeping accountability in this fragile moment of transition could destabilize the new government and jeopardize the warming of relations between the United States and Sri Lanka. Too little, because the United Nations investigation doesn’t have any teeth — the panel leading it doesn’t have the powers of a criminal tribunal, and cannot even impose a financial penalty.
Here is where Washington can play a constructive role.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the former defense secretary, oversaw the Sri Lankan armed forces’ worst atrocities during the final stages of the civil war and, as it happens, he is a naturalized American citizen. (Indeed, he used to live in Los Angeles, where he worked as a computer systems operator at Loyola Law School.)
As a citizen, Mr. Rajapaksa can be held liable under the War Crimes Act of 1996, which puts war crimes anywhere in the world under the jurisdiction of United States courts if the perpetrator, or the victim, is a United States citizen. Put another way, the United States has a perfect justification to go after Mr. Rajapaksa individually.
Independent observers have long viewed Gotabaya Rajapaksa as an obstacle, perhaps even more than his brother, to a smooth political transition in Sri Lanka. There is little indication that he will respect the new government, which has opened an investigation to look into widely reported allegations that he and his brother attempted to engineer a military coup to overturn the election results.
It is in the new government’s interest to move decisively to protect its democratic victory by eliminating the threat of Mr. Rajapaksa’s return to power. That is a distinct possibility if his brother, Mahinda, succeeds in a bid to maintain control over the powerful opposition party.
That’s why marginalizing Mr. Rajapaksa now is important. The new president, Mr. Sirisena, has signaled that he is open to domestic criminal prosecutions to ward off foreign war crimes trials. And the president’s spokesman has indicated that the government may be willing to prosecute specific war crimes, such as the so-called White Flag incident, in which surrendering Tamil leaders with white flags were allegedly executed by soldiers on the final day of the civil war. That’s a highly significant statement because, as many Sri Lankans know, and as the State Department reported to Congress, the army chief at the time said that Mr. Rajapaksa gave the order “they must all be killed,” and later added that he would be willing to testify in a war crimes trial.
But proceeding against Mr. Rajapaksa will be politically challenging for the new Sri Lankan government to do on its own. The United States could help by signaling its own interest in opening a criminal case against Mr. Rajapaksa in the event that Sri Lanka doesn’t. That would give the new government both an opportunity and a justification to clean its house. Because of Mr. Rajapaksa’s citizenship, the United States would also be less vulnerable to accusations that it was meddling in the affairs of another nation.
The Obama administration might even say, in a very public way, that it will decide whether to proceed with its own criminal inquiry after giving Sri Lanka’s new establishment an opportunity to move first. Such signals from the United States could help politically marginalize the Rajapaksas at a critical point in the life of the country. They would also bolster President Sirisena’s efforts to have the country repudiate the past and recognize that its best future lies with his administration. The United States should do its part to bring accountability to Sri Lanka and assist its transition to democracy.
Ryan Goodman is a professor of law, politics and sociology at New York University and co-editor in chief of the blog Just Security.

Underworld figures to return to assist in Maithri Paalanaya!

maithri palanayaSeveral underworld leaders, who had fled the country due to the fear they had for former defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, are now coming back, reports say.
Blacklisted by Gotabhaya, these gangsters were building connections with politicians in order to get their names removed from the blacklist.
Among them are Lal Peiris alias Kudu Lal, Nadun, Galaha and Pradeep. Donald alias Ranji of Maligawatte is arranging their return. It is known publicly that Gotabhaya and former minister Mervyn Sivla had got the ex-president to free Donald after he was abucted in a white van.
He is extorting money now using a picture he had taken during the presidential election with president Maithripala Sirisena.


Colombo Telegraph
January 21, 2015 Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake has agreed to stay only one day after reinstatement, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
Sources close to CJ Bandaranayaka told Colombo Telegraph that she is not willing to hear any case. “She will also resign, she is only expecting a decent farewell” they further said.
Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake
Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake
However, even if the Rajapaksa-fabricated cases against her are withdrawn, the case against her husband will be continue, a source close to Prime MinisterRanil Wickremesinghe told Colombo Telegraph.
Her husband Pradeep Kariyawasam is a suspect in a case before a magistrate over the NSB scandal. Kariyawasam is facing charges before the Colombo Chief Magistrate’s Court for causing a monetary loss to the Government to the tune of over Rs. 391 million through the unlawful purchase of The Finance Company (TFC) shares.
“Shirani Bandaranayake did not enter the official bar through the normal recruiting process. Her appointment to the Bench was purely political. Therefore she begins her career as a judge with politics. Thereafter she may have been on her own to the extent that CJ Sarath N. Silva and the other succeeding CJs were on their own, but were certainly not what Judge Mark Fernando was. Judge Bandaranayake proved she was with the Rajapaksa regime in 2010 August, when she presided over the petitions on the 18th Amendment that was shrouded in mystery where even the Cabinet of Ministers was not given time to study it, before giving consent. She knew there was no urgency for that Bill, as the President was going to take oaths for his second term, only in November, but does not dissent in her determination and insisted only on the 2/3rds majority clause knowing very well that the President had secured this in numerous ways. She had won the trust of the regime and this is what secured her the CJs appointment in May 2011,” a critic told Colombo Telegraph
“It was also this very same affinity which prompted her to throw her independence away, ridicule the independence of the Judiciary and insult the aspirations of the people by posing pose smilingly for a photograph with the Rajapaksa family after Namal Rajapaksa was sworn in as a lawyer. That broke all tradition and all ethics. It was also the trust the Rajapaksas had in Sirani Bandaranayake that paved the way for Kariyawasam to obtain top level appointments not only at the NSB but even before at the Insurance Corp.
‘It is still not known how that bond of loyalty and trust fell apart, but broken it was and the entire matter came into the public view through the impeachment process. This is where we as the public got an opportunity to forge a new alliance that may give an independent judiciary another chance. This was accidental, but we should try to use it to the advantage of the people in securing some independence. Let us also not forget that personality driven projects to secure the independence of the judiciary often does not work the right way, as we saw in the way CJ Silva behaved after falling out with Mahinda Rajapaksa.” the critic further said.
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