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

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Cancer, Heart Attack or Stroke Will Not Kill us! Something Else Will

Top Healthy Life

As one research of international experts has shown, in the year 2050, the excessive use of antibiotics and the resistance to them that people are likely to develop as a consequence, will be the number one cause for deaths in the world.
A group of scientists, hired by the British government, claim that the resistance of antibiotics will overtake malignant diseases which are the main cause for death in world nowadays.
As stated, due to the antibiotics resistance, on a global scale, yearly, from 2050, around 10 million people will suffer, mostly in Asia with 4, 7 million and in Africa with 4, 1 million.
Experts consider that in Europe the resistance of antibiotics will be the cause of death for around 390 thousand cases, and in the USA, 317 thousand.
Cancer, the number two cause of death, from 2050 will take around 8,2 million lives yearly, diabetes 1,5 million and traffic accidents 1,2 million.
This study also shows that in the next 35 years, despite the antibiotics resistance, around 300 million people will die before their age, whereas today, 700 thousand people die from the same cause.
The research has shown that on a world scale, the consumption of antibiotics has risen 40 percents in the period between 2000 and 2010.

Friday, March 27, 2015

'Concrete acts of co-operation' with OHCHR needed says Amnesty International

26 March 2015

The Sri Lankan government must take “concrete” steps towards co-operating with the United Nations said Amnesty International in an address to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday.

Calling the Sri Lankan government's commitment to prioritise engagement with the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) “promising”, Amnesty International said “it needs to be backed by concrete acts of co-operation, including to determine truth and pursue justice for crimes under international law”.

“Amnesty International cannot stress enough the need for a thorough accounting and justice for the victims of violations and abuses in Sri Lanka,” said the organisation. 

The non-governmental organisation continued to say it “strongly encourages Sri Lanka to use the time until the Council considers the OHCHR Inquiry report in September 2015 to take specific measures to improve its human rights situation.”

“Publishing the names and locations of all detainees and permitting family visits; charging and trying detainees promptly in accordance with international standards or releasing them; repealing the Prevention of Terrorism Act; and acceding to the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance,” were examples of specific measures Sri Lanka could take before September said Amnesty International.

“This Council should continue to encourage, support and monitor progress in Sri Lanka, and remain vigilant for reprisals against human rights defenders,” concluded the statement.

See the full statement here.

Balendran Vibushika Released From Probation

Balendran Vibushika Released From Probation
Asian Mirror
Friday, 27 March 2015
Kilinochchi Magistrate Court on Thursday (26) ordered the release Balendran Vibushika from probation with immediate effect.
Vibushika, the daughter of Balendran Jeyakumari, was transferred to probationary custody in a children’s home in Kilinochchi after her mother’s arrest in March 2014.
Jeyakumari was detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) with no chargers filed.
Sri Lankan authorities had maintained that she harbored Selvanayagam Kajeepan alias Gobi, who allegedly tried reviving a network of the rebel Tigers. Gobi was also one of the three suspects that the Sri Lankan armed forces shot dead in April 2014 when they “attempted to escape”, according to the Sri Lanka Army.
However Jeyakumari, who was also an activist against involuntary disappearances, was released on bail Colombo Magistrate Court, 362 days after her detention on March 10.
Following Jeyakumari’s release on bail Kilinochchi Magistrate Court ordered authorities to hand over Vibushika to her mother’s custody.

Tamil representatives meet Australian foreign minister at Parliament House

tamils 2tamils 1Friday, 27 March 2015
Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Parliamentarian M. A. Sumanthiran and representatives from Global Tamil Forum (GTF) and Australian Tamil Congress (ATC) met Foreign Minister Hon. Julie Bishop and Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade officials (DFAT) at the Parliament House on Thursday, March 26.
Following that, the Tamil representatives addressed a Forum attended by Parliamentarians from all major parties, including by the Minister for immigration and Multicultural Affairs Hon. Peter Dutton. Later in the day, they had meetings with Shadow Foreign Minister Hon. Tania Plibersek and the leader of Australian Greens Hon. Senator Christine Milne. Foreign Minister Julie Bishop acknowledged the significance of the meeting by tweeting “Good meeting with Tamil National Alliance MP Mr. Sumanthiran and Tamil Diaspora representatives on recent developments in Sri Lanka and support for reconciliation.”
(https://twitter.com/JulieBishopMP/status/580941420577435648?s=17) MP Sumanthiran also signed the condolence book for Former Prime Minister Late Malcolm Fraser in the Parliament House.

India must be wary of Tamil extremism in Sri Lanka

By M.R. Narayan Swamy |
As Prime Minister Narendra Modi begins to build a relationship with Sri Lanka's new leadership, the one thing he needs to be wary of is the extremist Tamil position in the island nation.
Modi made history by becoming the first Indian prime minister to visit Sri Lanka after 1987 when Rajiv Gandhi went to Colombo to sign a pact to end Tamil separatism, which eventually consumed his life in 1991.
Modi won many hearts by becoming the first Indian leader to visit Jaffna, the Tamil heartland which is also the hub for the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) headed by Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran.
This is where Modi came across an intransigent Wigneswaran.
This is a critical time for Sri Lanka, which is trying, not successfully though, to overcome decades of ethnic strife that has split the island dominantly between the Sinhalese, the majority community, and the Tamils.
The end of the military conflict in May 2009 led to boisterous Sinhalese frenzy and a defeated Tamil psyche as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was crushed.
Further strains were introduced when Mahinda Rajapaksa, after losing the presidential election in January this year, blamed the West and - specifically - India for his defeat at the hands of Maithripala Sirisena.
The presidential election outcome was itself a close affair, showing that Rajapaksa still has wide support in Sinhalese areas. Since then, he has been attracting massive crowds at public meetings.
It was at such a sensitive juncture that the NPC, overseen by Wigneswaran, passed a resolution in February, just before Sirisena landed in India on his first trip abroad, accusing successive Sri Lankan governments of committing "genocide" against the Tamils.
It went on to say that Tamils have no hope for justice in any Sri Lankan mechanism, whether conducted by the Rajapaksa or Sirisena or any regime, and sought international intervention.
Needless to say, the move hugely embarrassed India. It was also just what Rajapaksa needed to show his Sinhalese constituency that Sirisena's election had emboldened extremist Tamils.
If this wan't enough, Wigneswaran, at the Jaffna meeting where he received Modi, called for talks between the Sri Lankan and Indian governments as well as the Northern and Eastern Provincial Councils to resolve Tamil issues "in an innovative and creative manner".
This is akin to the Hurriyat seeking to involve India, Pakistan and itself over Jammu and Kashmir.
Wigneswaran's demand in Modi's presence came shortly after the Indian prime minister had met leaders of the Tamil National Alliance, the party to which the chief minister too belongs, and called for patience.
It is surprising that Wigneswaran sought to bypass his own party by demanding direct talks between his provincial council as well as Colombo and New Delhi.
Indeed, after the NPC resolution on "genocide", friends of India in Sri Lanka suggested that it would be best if Modi avoided a public engagement involving Wigneswaran in Colombo or Jaffna.
The argument was that Wigneswaran seemed to be acting at the behest of the pro-LTTE Tamil Diaspora in the West and his words and actions could only show Tamils as extremists - and fuel appropriate Sinhalese backlash.
This is the last thing that India - and Modi - need now.
As India tries to help join the disjointed Sri Lanka jigsaw, which by itself is no easy task, it has to be borne in mind that Tamil extremism is essentially anti-Indian. It has always been so and will always be so.
India must be wary of being seen to be supportive of extremists - of any kind in Sri Lanka. It is no surprise that Wigneswaran gets the loudest cheers from Tamils in the West opposed to any reconciliation in Sri Lanka.
(M.R. Narayan Swamy is a long-time Sri Lanka watcher. The views expressed are personal. He can be reached on narayan.swamy@ians.in)

What Ails Our National Carrier – II

Colombo Telegraph
By Rajeewa Jayaweera -March 26, 2015
Rajeewa Jayaweera
Rajeewa Jayaweera
The writer wrote some weeks ago urging the government and national carrier to consider withdrawing from its European routes. The main purpose of my essay was to high light the contradiction in government policy of pouring millions of dollars into a national carrier on the one hand and following an ‘open skies’ aviation policy since 2001 resulting in the massive injection of capacity by Middle Eastern carriers on the other hand thus undermining the government’s own investment. From some of the comments observed, I felt that further expansion on the subject would help better understand the current situation.
Srilankan-airline-
The national carrier is unable to compete with carriers from the Middle East on its European routes. Even large carriers such as US carriers, British Airways, Lufthansa, Air France to name a few are being gradually eased out of some of their traditional markets. Agence France-Presse (AFP) recently carried the following news item. It was also published in one of the local leading dailies.
Quote;
Three top US airlines groups called on the US government and urged changes to the bilateral commercial aviation agreements between the United States of America and Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

According to the groups, $42 billion was given to UAE and Qatar based airlines, including Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways, and Emirates to push US carriers out of this lucrative market, and make competing impossible.

The US carriers together with workers’ groups issued a 55 page report detailing how “unfair” subsidies given to Gulf rivals Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Emirates have allowed them to wrest market share from the US industry.
Airlines from the United States are escalating their rhetoric against Emirates, Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways, even suggesting the near unprecedented action of rescinding open skies agreements, which the US has with the UAE and Qatar. The refrain is loud and echoes much of the European airline resistance – but US airlines cannot seem to agree on their target.

United CEO Jeff Smisek at one time said Gulf airlines are not subsidised, but then said they are “heavily subsidised”. American Airlines CEO Doug Parker said they are “perhaps” subsidised. Delta CEO Richard Anderson bemoans the role of state-owned airlines despite having many national carriers (Saudia, China Eastern etc.) as partners in SkyTeam.
“The multi-billion dollar subsidies… have allowed Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Emirates to rapidly expand their fleets and international routes, distorting the commercial marketplace to the severe detriment of US employment, the US economy and the US airline industry,” the US group said.

Two deaths in custody this month: Three cops on the mat


The Sunday Times Sri LankaAt least three policemen including two sergeants have been interdicted in connection with two separate cell deaths that took place at the start of this month, pending further investigations but a rights group while condemning the incidents has called for tougher action and transparency in the probe.
During the initial investigations the police claimed that in both incidents the victims had apparently hanged themselves while being detained in the holding cells of the two police stations.
The incidents took place inside the Dummalasooriya and Jaela police stations on March 4 and March 16 respectively shortly after midnight and the policemen were interdicted for neglect of duty and for irresponsibility, Police Spokesperson Assistant Superintendent (ASP) Ruwan Gunasekera told the Sunday Times.
In the incident at Dummalasooriya the victim is alleged to have used a belt to hang himself from the cell door while in the second case the man is alleged to have used a cord from his jogging pants to hang himself from the fanlight ventilator, according to ASP Gunasekera.
However he added that thorough investigations will be carried out of both incidents.
He also claimed that in both cases the victims had criminal records relating to theft and house breaking had but the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) thinks otherwise.
The victims were identified as Sameera Pathirana aged 38 who was a resident of Ekala-Ja-ela and Mahawattage Don Chaminda Pushpakumara (38) of Shanthigama, Dummalasooriya in the Kurunegala District.
AHRC claims that according to information gathered Chaminda Pushpakumara had no criminal record and that he was picked up by the Dummalasooriya Police on a complaint made by his wife following a domestic dispute.
The police later detained him on suspicion that he had robbed a gold chain and he had repeatedly maintained his innocence while in custody and voiced anger at his arrest, AHRC said in a statement.
Several relatives visited him within hours of his arrest and found him in good health. Later that night the police had him admitted to the Galmuruwa Government Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Subsequently the police issued a statement to the media that the suspect had hung himself inside the police cell. Relatives have questioned the veracity of the statement.
They asked how the victim could hang himself without any interference by another suspect who was occupying the same cell and the officer guarding the cell.
Witnesses who saw the body testified that there were injuries they did not notice several hours before the incident while the victim was alive.
Family members are strongly demanding justice for the illegal arrest, detention and extrajudicial killing of their family member. Because the persons responsible for the death are police officers, the family members are now living in fear of their lives, the statement added.

Mahinda Rajapakse’s relative Udayanga the ex Russian ambassador who sold arms to Ukraine terrorists has now disappeared !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 26.March.2015, 11.30PM) The exposure made by Lanka e news some years ago that the Sri Lanka ambassador in Russia , Udayanga Weeratunge , a relative of former President Mahinda Rajapakse is a dealer in weapons , and this has been confirmed now with the whole world coming to know he had supplied arms to terrorist groups in Ukraine.When the foreign  envoys were recalled to SL recently with a view to make new appointments , Udayangana not only kept away from returning to the country but had also gone missing. 
The government has decided to appoint a high powered committee to investigate these arms deals done on an international scale . Since these are very grave crimes and charges are most serious , foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera no sooner he returned to the country after his tour of China ,than he  named the investigating committee. The ministry of foreign affairs of Ukraine had in writing informed Samaraweera about these weapon  deals including the mode of operation , the category of weapons, the  names of the terrorist groups that purchased them , the period when these took place etc. 
At a special media briefing held yesterday (25) , these details were revealed by the deputy minister of foreign affairs , Ajith. P. Perera . The latter pointed out ,these activities conducted at foreign  diplomatic levels is a very serious  issue , and despite Udayanga being dismissed from his ambassador post, he had still not reported to the ministry of foreign affairs. It is to be noted it is only  Udayanga for the first time in SL ‘s history , had served as an ambassador for 8 long years after his  political ambassadorial appointment in the foreign country  .During the period of the last government charges were mounted against Udayanga , but  by explaining  that an investigation was to be conducted starting from  India , it was suppressed.
It is well to recall , Lanka e news earlier on reported that it is Udayanga who supplied arms for the weapons deals of former defense secretary Gotabaya Rajapakse.
Moreover , based on unofficial reports reaching Lanka e news ,after  a vehicle accident in Russia , the story that an officer  of the SL foreign service in Russia died shot down by a Russian national in the clash that followed  is  untrue , and that he was murdered on a premeditated plan , the relatives of the deceased suspected.That  officer who died was aware of the arms deals of Udayanga. Besides , Udayanga alone going to the scene of the death which occurred in a remote place has also fuelled the suspicions, relatives disclosed.
 Mahinda Rajapakse and Udayanga are cousin brothers. Mahinda Rajapakse’s mother is Dandina Hamine. Her sister is Nanda who was married to Wilbert Weeratunge and Udayanga Weeratunge  the ex Russian ambassador is the eldest son of Mrs.  Nanda and Mr Wilbert . Udayanga has three younger sisters , Ramani, Dayani and Gayani.


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by     (2015-03-26 23:09:48)

The Story Of The Rajapaksa Diplomats

Colombo Telegraph
By Ranga Kalansooriya -March 27, 2015 
Dr Ranga Kalansooriya
Dr Ranga Kalansooriya
Sunday Times in its last week edition carried somewhat a disturbing headline story that brought embarrassment to Sri Lanka mainly on international theatre. The story elaborated how Sri Lanka’s formerAmbassador to Russia had allegedly involved in arms sales to separatist rebel fighters in Ukraine.
This episode evolved following a formal complaint by the Ukrainian government of Petro Poroshenko lodged a formal and detailed complaint with the Sri Lanka Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the news story said. The accusation mainly deals with the sale of assault rifles and other small arms. Though both Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera and his deputy Ajith Perera made confirming comments on this complaint, local language media did not pick up the story at its desired levels.
If these allegations are true and correct, the highest ranked Sri Lankan diplomat in one of the key capitals (one of the five Security Council member countries) in the world has violated all accepted norms of diplomacy and international relations.
Udayanga Weeratunga who is the nephew of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had been resident of Ukranian capital Kiev running his own business “Club Lanka” until he was appointed to the highest rank at our Embassy in Moscow soon after President Rajapaksa assumed office ten years ago. According to his own Facebook page in which he is still the Sri Lankan Ambassador in Moscow, Weeratunga has studied at National Technical University of Ukraine, Kiev and graduated in 1991.
Ambassador to Russia Udayanga, Ex- President and Ex-FM
Ambassador to Russia Udayanga, Ex- President and Ex-FM
This unacceptable and highly embarrassing conduct of a top diplomat raises many questions (for which answers are pretty obvious I suppose) and challenges to the present government of Sri Lanka.
Weeratunga was among the dozens of kith and kin who extensively benefited with lavish diplomatic postings in capitals all over the world with or without necessary qualifications; mostly without. On many occasions the only qualification was being a member of a powerful family tree or connected otherwise to the top. These appointments not only included top diplomatic posts, but second and third tiers of embassies, as well as non-diplomatic postings. If I am not mistaken several embassies ran without a single career diplomat within the mission office which could lead into highly vulnerable situations on protocol and consular fronts.
Of course, the blame of appointing such substandard individuals to high diplomatic positions could be directed at the political leadership of the day, but at least there is one barrier that such appointments have to face – if at all it could considered a barrier. These appointments have to be approved by the Parliamentary High Post Committee and it would be interesting to go through the reports of such meetings where these individuals were whetted and scrutinised. I do remember the career diplomats’ collective body raising their concerns over substandard appointments at several occasions but those fell on deaf ears.
These crucial appointments were made totally neglecting the country priorities of the day – at a time when Sri Lanka was militarily confronting the most ruthless terror organisation in the world. Harsh military responses demanded tough political battles on diplomatic grounds in every single capital wherever we were present through our missions. But what happened in reality was entirely the opposite. Many political appointees were enjoying perks, some were engaging in their own businesses,some were educating their children in popular universities, some were on ‘medical postings’, some were dealing with state resources to make commercial benefits – all at the expense of the public. There was another fascinating part to this entire episode. The government outsourced most of the functions of our embassies to high-flying international private agencies through multimillion dollar deals resulting in a double waste of public funds.
Personnel in missions abroad should not be confined to career diplomatic officers. The embassies should be multi-faceted, multi- skilled one-stop shops representing Sri Lanka. There are many non-career diplomats who had excelled and became iconic figures within the country’s Foreign Service; the list could span from Prof. Gunapala Malalasekera to Rosy Senanayake.
Realising the importance of bringing private and corporate sector skills into the country’s diplomatic sphere, former foreign minister Lakshman Kadirgamar institutionalised a mechanism where many professionals from different sectors joined the Foreign Service. But that process at times faced several challenges including a few legal battles – but this does not mean that these could not be repeated or that the challenges could not be mitigated and the system restructured with a new dynamism.
The challenges of the day in foreign relations are multi-faceted ones that predominantly include damage control measures as well. There is a clear paradigm shift in the country’s foreign policy following the Jan 8 developments in the country and those were clearly visible during the past three months. The Geneva achievement, to my mind, is a temporary gain but bigger battles are ahead.
Although past political appointees were quick fixes filling those vacancies with necessary skills and capacities is the challenge. Foreign Service professionals alone could not fill this vacuum in meeting the present day challenges of Sri Lanka in our missions abroad.
The world of diplomacy is now slowly transforming from political diplomacy to economic diplomacy. Several European countries are already taking rigorous measures along this path. One Scandinavian ambassador in an East Asian capital briefed me last week on how their embassies are now converting into service providers to their own home-based businesses.“This has become more than seventy per cent of our work and we are not doing this as a mere service. This is a service for money. The embassy charges lucrative amounts from these home-based businesses to provide the services on an hourly rate basis that goes up to even USD 150 per hour,” the ambassador said..
“So we are now busy in several fronts – attracting necessary local knowledge and skills to the mission to provide these services, developing business plans and revenue models, I am trying to be skillful on these strange subjects myself. We used to enjoy golf and colourful evenings, but not anymore,” he said.
Thus, the political engagements and focus is now dominated with economic focus at these embassies.They are supposed to be one-stop shops for business opportunity seekers, PR exercises on public diplomacy but without totally neglecting the importance of political and consular engagements.
These trends could be too early for Sri Lanka, but could provide some food for thought in prioritising our challenges and opportunities in diplomatic fronts. The embassies which predominantly were retirement destinations, personal business ventures and places for personal achievements for kith and kin and other henchmen (sometimes for retired foreign service personnel as well) for a period over a decade need a serious clean up and revamping effort.
At the end of the day it is all about value for money. Millions of dollars of public funds are being spent monthly to maintain 50 odd Sri Lankan foreign missions all over the world. Thus, we need a strict monitoring and evaluation mechanism on these embassies to get the best value for public money.
Professionalism is the buzzword in this whole game.

Deadlock broken on port project

Chinese President Xi Jinping (2nd R) and his wife Peng Liyuan (1st R) pose for a group photo with Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena (2nd L) and his wife during a welcoming ceremony in Beijing, capital of China, March 26, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]
Deadlock broken on port project
By ZHAO SHENGNAN,ZHAO YINAN (China Daily)-2015-03-27

China and Sri Lanka agree to put suspended $1.4b Colombo infrastructure plan back on track
China and Sri Lanka have ended a stalemate over a $1.4 billion port project in the island nation's capital of Colombo — the biggest Chinese investment project in the country.
The development sees Beijing recovering their ties amid Colombo's policy shift after a leadership reshuffle.
During meetings with Chinese leaders in Beijing on Thursday, Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena promised to continue the infrastructure project, which was suspended by the country's new administration.
President Xi Jinping said China has always seen Sri Lanka as holding an "important diplomatic position in the region", while Premier Li Keqiang called for "consistency and stability of policies" in Sri Lanka.
Sirisena, who visited India soon after taking office in January, is making his first trip to China.
He said Sri Lanka appreciates China's continued support for the Colombo port project as well as other Chinese investment, adding that his government will take more effective measures to promote cooperation with China.
Problems surrounding construction of the port project are "temporary and do not lie with the Chinese side", he said.
China, which is sinking millions of dollars into Sri Lanka's infrastructure, is the island's biggest investor.
The new Sri Lankan government has ordered a review of the Colombo port project following allegations of wrongdoing that arose since Sirisena took office in January.
The suspension triggered concerns from China, which said the project was in line with local laws. Media reports said the commercial losses caused by the suspension could be as high as $380,000 a day.
During Thursday's talks, Xi pledged to expand bilateral trade and industrial cooperation with easier funding from the Beijing-led Silk Road Fund and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
The two financial institutions are committed to funding economic development in countries along the New Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road.
Xi also promised to speed up talks on a free trade agreement with Sri Lanka to lower tariffs, and to deepen economic exchanges, especially on health, agriculture, science and technology, tourism and talent training.
Liu Xiaoxue, a researcher of South Asian studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Sri Lanka is an important partner in building Beijing's initiative for the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road.
It is located at a key section on the route linking the resource-rich Gulf of Aden with China's booming coastal cities. Hower, Sri Lanka needs support to rebuild its infrastructure after its civil war, Liu said.
"The port project, like many other Chinese investments in the country, is a commercial deal, which means conflicts over the project should be solved through talks," she said.
Meanwhile, China and Indonesia issued a joint declaration on deepening ties and signed eight agreements in Beijing on Thursday.
They signed one memorandum of understanding on greater cooperation in infrastructure and industry, and another on building a high-speed railway linking the Indonesian capital of Jakarta and Bandung, about 180 km southeast of Jakarta. Others cover wide-ranging areas, including maritime searches, taxation, airspace and cooperation between Chinese and Indonesian enterprises.
Xi told his Indonesian counterpart Joko Widodo before they witnessed the signings that China is willing to use the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and Silk Road Fund to take part in Indonesia's development of ports, high-speed railways, airports, shipbuilding and special economic zones in coastal areas.
Widodo, making his first state visit to China since taking office in October, said Indonesia welcomes Chinese State-owned and private enterprises to its infrastructure sector and in constructing special economic zones.
zhaoyinan@chinadaily.com.cn and zhaoshengnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Sri Lanka’s pivot to India breaks China’s dreams

Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj shook hands with her Sri Lankan counterpart, Mangla Samaraweera, in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj shook hands with her Sri Lankan counterpart, Mangla Samaraweera, in Colombo, Sri Lanka.Activists demanded the scrapping of a $1.4 billion Chinese project to reclaim land from the sea and build a new port in the capital Colombo. The project is on hold.
COLOMBO — Sri Lanka-By H.D.S. Greenway  
The Boston GlobeFollowing elections earlier this year, a major shift in the geopolitical and perhaps military balance of power is taking place on this island that hangs like a jewel from the ear of India. Many Americans may have trouble finding Sri Lanka on the map, but sitting as it does in the Indian Ocean, so close to the sea lanes over which nearly half the world’s trade travels, including nearly 70 percent of petroleum to energy-hungry China and Japan, Sri Lanka has a strategic importance beyond its small size.

Divi Neguma is a colossal swindle! – Basil who fled abroad is to be got down immediately for questioning !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 26.March.2015, 11.30PM)  Ex minister Basil Rajapakse the brother of ex president Mahinda Rajapakse of the Rajapakse regime presently abroad who is allegedly involved in a number of  financial irregularities that took place in the Divi Neguma department which  was under his purview is to be summoned to the country for interrogation. The financial frauds investigation division has sought the preliminary attorney general’s advice to secure permission from court to get him down, police media spokesman , ASP Ruwan Gunasekera revealed.
The police media spokesman addressing  a press briefing at the police headquarters today said , action is being taken to bring down the ex minister Basil Rajapakse who is now overseas , as soon as possible. The financial fraud investigation division is currently conducting an investigation into the financial frauds in the Divi Neguma department which  included the printing done and  the expenditure of Rs. 70 million for the Divineguma  convention.
While the financial frauds department was investigating the Divi Neguma frauds , the Director of the department , R.K. Ranawaka had stated he did everything on the instructions of Basil Rajapakse. Accordingly , a court order is to be obtained to be given to the Interpol to get down Basil from abroad.
Just as the presidential elections were concluded , Basil fled to America , but in parliament it was disclosed a few days ago , he is in Vietnam. 
In addition to the alleged frauds of Basil ,the financial fraud investigation department has questioned the ex chairman of the Corporation regarding the oil hedging illicit deals, as well as the  expenditure of Rs. 14.5 million for the renovation of MIG planes .
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by     (2015-03-26 23:11:46)

Corruption Sri Lanka : Ranil Wickremasinghe Vs Shiral Lakthilaka


Untitled
Sri Lanka Brief27/03/2015
The Coordinating Secretary to the President, Attorney-at-Law Shiral Lakthilaka, in an interview with Ceylon Today spoke of two pressing issues – the need to prosecute cases of corruption with more vigour and to go for a national government with a ‘win-win’ situation. The country now has the latter, but now the question is whether a government with the same old faces would be as interested in pursuing the corruption of the past.
Following are the excerpts of the interview:

SLFP Snubs Also Call For ‘Royalist’ As Opposition Leader

Colombo Telegraph
March 27, 2015
Sri Lanka Freedom Party snubs today made a call for the appointment of Ranil Wickremesinghe‘s Royal College classmate Dinesh Gunawardena as the opposition leader.
Dinesh Gunawardena is a classmate of Wickremesinghe at Royal College and recently participated at a ceremony held to pay tribute to the new Prime Minister and other Royalist Ministers at Royal College.
Dinesh Gunawardena is a classmate of Wickremesinghe at Royal College and recently participated at a ceremony held to pay tribute to the new Prime Minister and other Royalist Ministers at Royal College.
Speaking at the rally in Ratnapura held to call for the nomination of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa as the Prime Ministerial candidate, many speakers called for the appointment of MEP leader Dinesh Gunawardena as the opposition leader.
Earlier, Vasudeva Nanayakkara an ally of Mahinda Rajapaksa said that 50 parliamentarians of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party had signed a petition calling for the appointment of Gunawardena as the leader of the opposition.
The current Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has been accused of filling the cabinet with old boys of Royal College.
The Colombo Telegraph earlier provided a list of key cabinet portfolios which have beendesignated to Royalists, including all portfolios related to finance.
Dinesh Gunawardena is a classmate of Wickremesinghe at Royal College and recently participated at a ceremony held to pay tribute to the new Prime Minister and other Royalist Ministers at Royal College.
Earlier, speaking in Parliament Wimal Weerawansa said that the mandate given to President Maithripala Sirisena had been ‘hijacked’.
“The country voted for a President, and they hijacked it and appointed a Prime Minister and then they have now got there own opposition leader. What kind of mockery of the parliamentary system is this” he asked.
The new appointed Ministers also include Royalists, including Ranjith Siyambalapitiya and Dilan Perera.