Peace for the World

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

Friday, April 24, 2015

Smitten with Cuba? Better call the love detective before you commit.


Cuban locals dance with tourists at Mi Conuco Cafeteria on the Malecón in Havana. It’s easy to fall in love under such circumstances. A firm will check out the object of your affection there — for a fee. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)
 April 23 at 8:11 PM
HAVANA — As they begin to visit this long-forbidden island in greater and greater numbers, it is only natural that some American travelers will fall in love with Cuba. Others, with Cubans.
And when they do, a few may return home anguished by doubts about their budding Cuban romances. Are they real? Or just scams to get off the island?

A Boiled Egg Remedy for High Blood Sugar


A Remedy from Boiled Egg against High Blood Sugar
  A Boiled Egg Remedy for High Blood Sugar2015-04-20T03:28:31+02:00
Healthy Food TeamEffectively reduces blood sugar very quickly. It requires attendance, and commitment. During the period of treatment you should remove the source that contributed to the increase in blood sugar, especially to keep an eye on food.
The recipe is simple and easy and it requires only malic acid and a boiled egg every day. In addition to speed up the healing, you can make a healing water to drink during the day. In 1.5 liter of water put a tablespoon of Ceylon cinnamon and Muscat walnut, maybe an apple chopped into pieces. Let the water stand overnight and drink it in the next day.

Recipe for reducing high blood sugar
Boil an egg in the evening. Peel it and make a few holes in it with a fork. Place the egg in a bowl and pour it with malic acid. Leave it overnight.
When you get in the morning, before anything, pour the apple acid away and eat the egg.
When you eat the egg, you must drink a glass of lukewarm water in which you dissolve a tablespoon of the malic acid.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Message of Maithri for Motherland!

  • 19A crucial to preventing emergence of dictatorship
  • Says no other leader afforded unlimited power has been so willing to give it up
  • Tackles criticism about his leadership skills
  • Vows not to use the full force of his office because people put him there to reduce powers of the presidency
  • Recalls the risks he took to contest the presidency in January; vows to be fearless in fulfilling election pledges
  • Hints at counter-revolution being staged by ex-regime
  • Bemoans slavish mentality of some who have been granted a taste of freedom
  • Hits out against racists spreading communal tensions with falsehoods on the internet
By Dharisha Bastians-April 24, 2015
On completing his 100th day as President of Sri Lanka, Maithripala Sirisena issued a clarion call to the national legislature to pass key constitutional reforms that will slash the powers of his office and strengthen democracy and freedom in the country.
யாழில் ஊடகவியலாளர் கைது
news
logonbanner-123 ஏப்ரல் 2015, வியாழன்
பிராந்திய ஊடகவியலாளர் ஒருவர் உட்பட மூவர் யாழ்ப்பாண பொலிஸாரினால் இன்று அதிகாலை கைது செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.
 
யாழ்ப்பாணப் பல்கலைக்கழகத்துக்கு அருகிலுள்ள வீடொன்றில் தங்கியிருந்தவர்களை, பொலிஸ் வாகனத்தில் சிவில் உடையில் சென்ற பொலிஸார் கைது செய்துள்ளதாக தெரிவிக்கப்படுகின்றது.
 
இதன்போது ஊடகவியலாளருடன் தங்கியிருந்த 2 பல்கலைக்கழக மாணவர்கள் மற்றும் பிறிதொரு நபர் என மொத்தம் 4 பேர் கைது செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.
 
இவர்களை கைது செய்ததை உறுதிப்படுத்திய பொலிஸார், கைது செய்ததுக்கான காரணம்  எதனையும்  தெரிவிக்கவில்லை என்பது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.  

Lawyers criticize speaker and MPs

BY RUWAN LAKNATH JAYAKODY-2015-04-23 
Criticizing the Speaker for questioning the Chairman of the Bribery Commission about a pending inquiry, Lawyers for Democracy (LfD) condemned certain MPs for attempting to interfere and intimidate the Commission from inquiring into allegations against powerful personalities.
Viewing the Speaker's action of calling the Commission Chairman and questioning him with alarm, Convener for LfD, Lal Wijenayake said that the Speaker had no legal or moral right to interfere in an ongoing investigation.
If an individual has a grievance against any person or any institution he/she has the remedy of resorting to legal action by way of a writ and/or by way of a fundamental rights application, LfD observed.
"The independence of the institutions of the State has to be protected. The legislature and the Executive have no right to interfere in the administrational justice. This is an affront to the rule of law and democratic governance. The law has to apply equally to all citizens, regardless of however, mighty they may be. This dangerous development has to be checked.
"The people at the last presidential election clearly voted for the abolition of the executive presidential system due to the abuse and misuse of power that was witnessed during the past few years. The people have given the President a clear mandate to uphold to the rule of law. The President must see to it that the rule of law prevails. This is also the wish of the civil society, trade unions, university teachers, the Bar Association of Sri Lanka and other organizations of lawyers, artists and media, which led the struggle to restore the rule of law in a united fight against this dangerous trend," he added.

Ban Mechanized Bottom Trawling in Sri Lankan Waters – M. A Sumanthiran, MP,TNA

sumanthiran-575-01
Sri Lanka Brief23/04/2015
A Bill prohibiting mechanized bottom trawling was filed in parliament on the 21st of April 2015 by M. A Sumanthiran, Member of Parliament. The Bill calls for the amendment of the Fisheries and Aquatic Resources Act, No 2 of 1996.
The Bill in essence proposes to prohibit trawling operations in Sri Lankan waters. The Bill seeks to:
• Amend legislation which allows for licenses to be granted for trawling operations;
• Prohibit the use, possession, import, transport, purchase and sale of trawl nets for the purpose of carrying trawling operations in Sri Lankan waters;
• Specify the action to be taken in the event of persons engaging in trawling operations in contravention of these provisions.
bottom trawling
bottom trawling
Bottom trawling is an extremely destructive form of fishing and can result in long term damage to marine resources. Over the past few years we have witnessed the extent to which Indian trawlers have continued to enter Sri Lankan waters, and exploit our resources. “Foreign fishermen fishing in our water has caused great distress to our fishermen specially those living in the north”, M.A. Sumanthiran stated regarding the issue. In addition to these Indian trawlers, there are also Sri Lankan trawlers operating within Sri Lankan waters.
The Sri Lankan marine system is rich in resources. The impact of mechanized bottom trawlers on these marine resources is extremely detrimental to the livelihoods of all Sri Lankan fishermen who depend upon these resources for fishing. These trawlers dig through the seabed indiscriminately catching all organisms in its path. The seabed is destroyed, and all resources on the seabed, which are not required, are discarded, thereby destroying the sustainability of these resources. The effect of these trawlers are such that it destroys resources for the present and future generations. It is our Sri Lankan fishermen who are at stake, as a result of the continued operation of these vessels.
Whilst there are proposals tabled to police the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL) and to introduce a licensing regime, an independent analysis done by Verité Research explains why neither proposal will actually solve the problem, and suggests the introduction of a better alternative – imposing a total ban on mechanized bottom trawling which is the objective of the Bill.
Sumanthiran further stated, “We have taken several remedial measures pertaining to the same, one of which was a discussion with the President. One such measure is to bring in a legislative measure towards which a Bill has been presented to Parliament. If this act is implemented deep sea trawling will be banned and will be considered an offence. The offender will be sentenced to a two year prison term and will have to pay a fine of Rs. 50,000.”
Source: Verité Research – www.ft.lk/2014/11/05/

President appeals to parties to help adopt 19th Amendment

April 23, 2015

logoPresident appeals to parties to help adopt 19th Amendment President Maithripala Sirisena today appealed to all political parties to assist in passing the 19th Amendment to the Constitution in order to firmly establishing freedom and democracy in the country. 
“In order to build a democratic and civilized society, it is necessary to prevent the emergence of dictatorship and taking control of state power, state assets, the judiciary, parliament and all of this to one’s own control that comes from the Executive Presidential system.”

The Battle For The Kingdom He Lost

Colombo Telegraph

By Nimalka Fernando -April 23, 2015
Nimalka Fernando
Dr. Nimalka Fernando
I write this comment with a sense of disgust. People who braved the risks of resisting Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime knew they were doing so with death standing at their door-step. President Maithripala Sirisensa eloquently expressed this reality by saying that “I would have been seven feet below the ground where I stand today if we had lost the election”. This reality is not yet over. Mahinda Rajapaksa and his brothers did not build their “Vampire State” for nothing. They are not sulking in a political corner licking their wounds. They have begun to mobilise with a vengeance. Don’t look far to see how they are planning their comeback. Look to those that slept inside the well of the parliament yesterday night. It is pretty obvious that these politicians are learning to live in ‘Political Displacement Camps’ (PDC). We Sri Lankans will have to start a new humanitarian venture called PDCs.
It is disgraceful that none of these members of parliament ever thought of doing this kind of `satyagraha’ when the coutry was being sold to China. Where were they when the Port City Project was signed? Were they sleeping when the Chairman of Sri Lankan Airlines was diverting flights to see his girl-friend? What were they doing when the son’s were bringing bollywood gangs at state expenses for their fun and frolick? What have they to say about “Siriliya Katha”, the Dame of Madamulana having some unbelievable identity card numbers and Bank accounts? Who benefitted from the Dame’s Fund? What happened to the funds of the Nil Balakayaand the so called “gifts” given to the youth leader? For every job given by the `young leader’ funds had to be deposited to the so called `Balakaya’ account. It is only very recently a former Minister of the Rajapaksa era shared these stories at a local meeting in Kurunegala. SLFPers present had all left this meeting silently after this revelation. It is truly shameful. The parliamentarians who went to sleep inside the well should be ashamed but I guess they cannot be because they are no better than the frogs who cannot see outside their own well.
Mahinda April 12 2015
People in Sri Lanka have no pity for those who now rally around to protect the privileges of the Ex-President. Did the Ex-President protect us from evil? He betrayed the very General who helped him to win the war? What did he do with the sacks of gold robbed from the areas of war, espeicially from Mulathivu and surrounding areas? What did he do to protect a poor government servant who was assaulted by a Cabinet Minister and who also tied him to a tree and forced the person to admit that he tied himself up? Did he act against this Minister who went on to claim that he made journalists to flee the country? The former President remained indecently silent when his own colleague, Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra was killed. The regime even sent sleuths from the criminal investigation department to record a statement from their erstwhile friend Vasudeva Nanayakkara, the former minister in effect to threaten others. All cabinet ministers shut their mouths afterwards. Thosands have disappeared during the Rajapaksa regime. Dead bodies were found thrown into shrubs. Some were assasinated in broad daylight like Lasantha and Raviraj. Raviraj and Joseph Pararajasingham were parliamentarians. Who dared to sit inside the parliament well then demanding `protection’ for their colleague? Whose privileges were violated then?                                                              Read More     

An Earnest Request to the Sri Lankan Parliamentarians- Lional Bopage, AAGGSL

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Sri Lanka BriefTo: All Honourable Members of Parliament.
23/04/2015
An earnest request to the Sri Lankan Parliamentarians:Support the passage of the proposed 19th Amendment to the Constitution
As you debate the above Constitutional Amendment in the Parliament under challenging circumstances, we thought that it is important to encourage you to see to its successful passage.
One of the major political reforms put to the people of Sri Lanka at the January 2015 Presidential election was the abolition of the Executive Presidency. The Presidential Election Manifesto and the various promises made during the election campaign led the people of Sri Lanka elect President Maithripala Sirisena in the belief that an interim national government, with Ranil Wickremasinghe as Prime Minister, will enact constitutional amendments to abolish the Executive Presidency. Almost all political entities and individuals who supported the ‘Common Opposition Candidate’, with the exception of Pivituru Hetak Jathika Sabhava, had the strongest expectation of fully abolishing the Executive Presidency.
The same manifesto also pledged to: … … abolish the 18th Amendment to the Constitution and replace it with the establishment of independent Commissions in order to secure the impartiality of institutions such as the judiciary, police, elections, auditing and the office of the Attorney-General (p.16). These far-reaching constitutional reforms are fundamentally vital for ‘good governance’ the people of Sri Lanka rightfully deserve.
We recognise that the proposed 19th Amendment to the Constitution will abrogate the 18th Amendment, and enable the establishment of Constitutional Council and other Independent Commissions. The Amendment also upholds proper procedures for making judicial appointments and recognises the ‘Right of access to information’ held by the government.
In light of the fact that the complete abolition of the executive presidency could only be achieved with the approval at a Referendum, AAGGSL strongly urges all political entities and individuals to support the passage of the proposed amendment, irrespective of their political differences. This will at least ensure partial fulfilment of the aspirations of the majority of the citizens, who voted for establishing Good Governance and enduring peace in Sri Lanka. Concerns of electoral reforms – though important – are secondary for now, and they can be and should be addressed in the spirit of things, responsibly and separately.
The recent Supreme Court decision – that the Parliament with two-thirds majority could (a) take away the Executive powers to appoint judges of the Supreme Court; (b) appoint Police Commission, Public Service Commission, Human Rights Commission, Elections Commission and Bribery Commission – gives renewed impetus for the passing of these important amendments.
We urge that you act in the best interest of the country at heart with courage and good will.
Please be advised that the AAGGSL respects the rights and will of all peoples of Sri Lanka, and is committed to supporting the establishment of practicing democracy and rule of law in our motherland. Strengthening democracy and empowering people always receive global recognition.
Yours sincerely
Dr Lionel Bopage
President, Australian Advocacy for Good Governance in Sri Lanka

Missing diplomat linked to Ukranian rebels:Lanka to send investigators to Kiev


article_image
by Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Udayanga

Sri Lanka is likely to send an investigation team to Kiev early next month to inquire into the alleged involvement of Sri Lanka’s former ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga in the supply of small arms to pro-Russian Ukranian rebels.

Alleging that Weeratunga had been involved with rebels during the previous UPFA administration, External Affairs Ministry sources told The Island that Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera on Tuesday night (April 21) discussed with the visiting Ukranian ambassador accredited to Sri Lanka Oleksandr Shevchenko the possibility of sending a team to Kiev.

Shevchenko is based in New Delhi.

Foreign Secretary Mrs. Chitranganee Wagiswara was associated in the discussion.

Government sources said that Lanka lacked the wherewithal to carry out an international manhunt. Sources acknowledged that the government wasn’t aware whether Weeratunga was still in Russia or had sought refuge in some other part of the world. However, Weeratunga wouldn’t dare move into Ukraine, sources said, adding that Ukraine could have requested Western countries to track him down.

Although the US Embassy in Colombo remained tight-lipped, the State Department has accused Russia of sending new weapons to separatists in eastern Ukraine.

The US media quoted Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland as having told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last Tuesday (7) that the continued resupply over the border was not compatible with a peace agreement negotiated in Minsk, Belarus. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), too, has accused Russia of arming rebels.

Russia has repeatedly denied Western allegations.

In addition to the alleged supply of weapons to Ukrainian rebels, Weeratunga is also sought by the Financial Crimes Investigation Division (FCID) to record a statement as regards his involvement in the procurement of four fully overhauled MiG 27s from Ukraine as well as overhauling of four MiGs already in Sri Lanka’s arsenal at the onset of the eelam war IV.

The police said also that Weeratunga had to be questioned regarding the death of Noel Ranasinghe, an employee of the Sri Lankan embassy in Moscow, also during the UPFA administration. The police recently exhumed Ranasinghe’s body on a magisterial order.

Weeratunga, a nephew of the defeated former president, operated a Sri Lankan restaurant in the Ukrainian capital Kiev before he was appointed Sri Lanka’s ambassador to Moscow nine years ago.

He served in Moscow for a record nine years until the new government ordered his recall to Colombo.

Weeratunga however did not return to Sri Lanka. His whereabouts are not known and he could not be contacted, Foreign Ministry sources said.

49 national movements of people that jointly worked for victory of ‘Swan’ decide to end the villainy and treachery of ‘thieves for thieves’


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -23.April.2015, 8.00PM) After the   Medamulana  highway robbers who sucked mother Lanka milk dry were defeated at the last presidential elections on January 8 th , some of them fled the country,   while some others - the  shameless SLFP crooks are apparently  reviving  to the detriment of the country. 
 On the other hand , the incumbent president of the country Maithripala Sirisena , who is also the SLFP president – is right now  in dire straits trying  to control those crooks  while the genuine  forces of the people  that even risked their lives to steer forward the new government of good governance with a view to introduce true welcome changes within the country by defeating the corrupt  brutal Rajapakse regime , has also after remaining  silent  hitherto ,having realized the current dangerous trends, is today taking a decision to resist the growing menace once again, nursed and nurtured by the groups that were booted out  by the people . It is an indisputable fact that the nation  finally heaved a sigh of relief when the Rajapakses were ousted on the 8 th of January  , and gleefully exclaimed ‘good riddance of bad rubbish at last.’
Sadly ,Maithripala who loudly and proudly announced that all crooks, criminals and the corrupt irrespective of their positions  and ranks who flourished  clandestinely under the previous Medamulana  regime will be duly punished  was however clueless when the ex president was issued a notice by the bribery and corruption commission to appear before the commission based on bribery charges. Maithripala was apparently ‘crippled’ unable to control his own SLFP members , not to mention  the SLFP ers who were given ministerial appointments by him under his own government when they created a furor  . Moreover , these SLFP members have even signed a petition demanding the removal of the Directress general of the Bribery and corruption commission . 116 of them signed it.

It is only the god above knows what  is the President’s approach when rounding up the crooks and the corrupt after ousting the only officer appointed to the bribery and corruption commission by the government of good governance. It is noteworthy that except the Directress general , all other officers in the commission are Rajapakse regime appointees. 
In view of these developments  ,about 60 representatives of  the 49 political parties ,trade unions,  civil organizations who signed the memorandum of understanding with Maithripala to propel him to victory as a common candidate with a view to defeat the Rajapakse regime and abolition of the executive presidency  have decided to hold a meeting at the CSR hall , Maradana  on 21st .
There are so many matters on which these groups  agreed unanimously in the run up to the last presidential elections. So far , what had  been taking  place is running counter to the promises given to the people , and against the changes that  were  pledged , and were to be  given effect to following the victory on  the 8th of January. But now , goons and gangs are dominating the scene , and all these circus acts  are geared to hamper the 19 th amendment . Even the protests that were to be staged today in front of the parliament is also part of that conspiracy , it had been pointed out.

It is also to be decided  at today’s meeting to pressurize the president and the prime minister to dissolve parliament and to go for a parliamentary election if the 19 th amendment cannot be passed on the 27 th in parliament .
The representatives of  all these political parties , trade unions  and civil organizations are also to take a decision to hold a massive demonstration in Colombo on the 27 th with a view to pass the 19 th amendment successfully in parliament  in order to prove that the people are steadfastly  with the motherland and it is  a genuine progressive campaign  , unlike the ‘thieves supporting thieves’ which is a country thieving  perfidious campaign .
---------------------------
by     (2015-04-23 14:36:58)

Fealty to the country or commitment to the party?


Sri Lanka Guardianby M. Zulkifli Nazim

Views expressed in this article are author own
( April 24, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The disorderly and criminal behaviour by some members of the opposition in the esteemed legislative assembly on the 20th of April 2015, shows an extremely careless disregard for the law, decorum, propriety in manners and conduct as well as decency in the precincts of the noble parliament – Violating, breaching and desecrating the august premises.

The worst is the unbelievable statement made by His Excellency, the President Maithripala Sirisena and his total inaction and deep freeze attitude clearly sends the message of displaced loyalty – vis-à-vis that the President is hell-bent on protecting his party than the country.

The proclamation made by Mr. Maithripala Sirisena at the time of his ceremonial induction as President of our beloved country was phenomenal – exceedingly and unbelievingly great where he asserted and declared that he will build a civilized country.

The parliament, the main body which enacts legislations, to build a civilized country does not even contain civilized, cultured or even genteel members in the party chaired by President Sirisena. What emanated from the parliament last Monday evening, was not the fragrance of the seeds of a civilized country, but the stinking stench of barbarism, savagery, atrocity and the quality of shockingly cruel and inhumane – A distinctive odour , offensively unpleasant saturating the atmosphere.
The incumbent President must bear in mind, always, that he was conferred this position by the people to do away with autocracy – the political system that was favouring unlimited authority by a single individual.

This absolute power which was the foundation of absolute corruption was seen by the people of this country and the whole wide world for over a decade of lawlessness, absolute dictatorship unrestricted by a constitution, laws or opposition – a decade of degeneracy, decadence, abjection and moral depravity.
It is very clearly seen, that although the members of the party headed by president Maithripala Sirisena permeated and imbued with moral perversion, impairment of virtue and degenerate moral principles, they are not short of shrewedness and skill in deception in nailing the incumbent president to the wall by making him the Chairman of the party – they knew, the psyche and mentality of the president, whose allegiance to the party supersedes any other commitment – even his dedication to the betterment of the country. This was proved beyond any reasonable doubt on the day of the fateful decision to implement the 19th Amendment for the amelioration of our beloved country, which was attacked and violently squashed by the president’s own party members.

We can also see where people who should be subjected to brickbats, punishments and incarceration are welcomed with bouquets with His Excellency The President Maithripala Sirisena remaining mum and failing to communicate his disgust and strong aversion.

The Rajapaksa presidency was loyal only to his family and his degenerate henchmen and never the country – quite in a similar, but perverted fashion, The Maithripala Sirisena presidency is more loyal to his party –than to the country or to the people who placed him in power.

It is indeed a betrayal of trust against the decent people of Sri Lanka, by the most trusted person.

Dear Mr. Maithripala Sirisena, please take cognizance of the fact that the people of this country were shedding tears of blood during the Rajapaksa presidency and we expected you to wipe our tears and today Mother Lanka is shedding tears of blood.

SRI LANKA: EXECUTIVE PRESIDENCY HAS HUGE CHALLENGES – ANALYSIS

Sri Lanka's Maithripala Sirisena. Official photo via Facebook.By N. Sathiya Moorthy*-
With the Sri Lankan Supreme Court’s statutory ‘determination’ that provisions for ‘transfer of power’ at the helm, in the government-proposed 19th Amendment to the Constitution, cannot be enforced without a mandated public referendum, the much-maligned and equally abused ‘Executive Presidency’ scheme will stay, at least for now. On the ‘positive side’, especially for the government, the ‘determination’ of the Bench headed by Chief Justice K. Sripavan has kept alive the hopes of early parliamentary polls, promised in President Maithripala Sirisena in his manifesto for the January 8 election.
Sri Lanka Executive Presidency Has Huge Challenges – Analysis by Thavam Ratna

Indo-Lanka relations and regional fence-mending


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Sri Lankan President and Indian PM (R)
 
The continuing and chronic uneasiness characterizing Sri Lanka’s ties with India, testifies strikingly to Sri Lanka’s inability to forge a satisfactory and enduring policy towards her major neighbour over the decades. Except briefly, over a couple or so of bilateral questions in the sixties and seventies, Sri Lanka has never managed to iron out her differences with India in an exceptionally amicable manner. This is glaring proof of a regional policy failure on the part of Sri Lanka which is being largely glossed over by this country’s decision-making and power elite, besides other important sections.

To begin with, influential quarters in Sri Lanka seem to be adamantly inclined to ignore some of the most fundamental realities in the regional politics context. One of these constitutes the conduct which should be expected of a major regional power. Given its regional preponderance, it ought not to come as a surprise to any of India’s smaller neighbours that India would be acutely vigilant to developments in South Asia, which would have security implications, for instance, for her. One could not expect a major power to stand idly by while its most vital interests are seen as being compromised as a result of the security policy decisions of any of its neighbours. Likewise, a big power cannot be expected to wink at any destabilizing tendencies within its borders, resulting from political developments in any of its neighbouring countries.

In other words, the observer of regional politics should consider it advisory to adopt a political realism point of view in assessing international political developments. Which major power would look the other way, while what it sees as its national interest is undermined by one of its neighbours? Indeed, no self-respecting state could afford to do so, whether categorized as major or minor.

It is plain to see that a country, big or small, needs to deal empathetically with its neighbours, for the purpose of ensuring a measure regional amity and unity. In this respect, the majority of South Asian states have failed badly. They have failed to see that unless they are motivated by the principle of empathy, their regional policies are doomed to failure.

In the case of Sri Lanka’s ties with India, the inference is inescapable that ad-hocism has been permitted to play too big a role in Lanka’s handling of her relations with her major neighbour. While empathy needed to be a prime and permanent characteristic of our policy towards India, this was not allowed to be the case, wittingly or unwittingly. However, in the sixties and seventies, as earlier alluded to, administrations under former Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike managed to resolve some seemingly thorny issues with India, as a consequence of the exceptionally positive rapport which was maintained between the countries in those times. Two such issues were the Indian-origin plantation workers’ question and the Kachchathivu problem. It was plain that positively-oriented, sustained negotiations played a substantial role in sorting out these questions.

It was not only what was seen as the personal friendship between the countries’ Prime Ministers in those years which proved decisive in resolving the bilateral questions concerned; there was also the similarity in foreign policy orientation between India and Sri Lanka which acted as a veritable lubricant in ensuring that bilateral ties were relatively friction-free. The policy principle in question here is Non-alignment.

These elements were lacking in the foreign policy formulation process in the J.R. Jayewardene years, for instance. Besides the political leadership of Sri Lanka and India not relating to each other amicably, the J.R. administration deviated from the principle of Non-alignment by cultivating close security ties with the West in its fight against Tamil militant organizations. It was mainly this development which compelled India to seemingly ‘go soft’ on Tamil militant groups in Southern India. The consequence was a rapid deterioration in bilateral relations.

Thus, it could be seen that Sri Lanka’s deviation from the policy of cultivating mutual understanding with India in a sustained manner, led to an unprecedented souring of Indo-Lanka relations in the J.R. years. If it were a policy principle on the part of Sri Lanka that close relations between India and Sri Lanka should be maintained on the basis of empathetic understanding, Indo-Lanka ties would not have crumbled in those times. Short-sightedness on the part of Sri Lanka led to serious security concerns on India’s part, which in turn compelled her to a course of action, which she saw as meeting her interests at the time.

To be sure, these principles of good neighbourliness should be strongly adhered to by states both big and small in their relations with each other. That is, India should respect the sensitivities of her neighbours and the latter should be mindful of India’s concerns and national interest.

However, considering the huge asymmetries of power between India and her neighbours and the vast and numerous human and natural resources India is obliged to protect, in comparison to her neighbours, the latter should see it as specially incumbent on them to be consistently mindful of India’s sensitivities and concerns and to fashion their relations towards her accordingly. In other words, the rest of South Asia should put in a special effort to learn to live amicably with India. After all, nothing could be done about the smaller states’ geographical proximity to India. These states have no choice but to fashion regional policies on the basis of these unalterable geographical and physical realities.

Accordingly, the current Maithripala Sirisena administration in Sri Lanka is acting with foresight by expending some effort towards mending fences with India, while remaining on amicable terms with the rest of South Asia. It is Non-alignment which would serve South Asia’s interests best. In contrast, the former Mahinda Rajapaksa administration showed signs of succumbing to local populist sentiments as regards India. Foreign and regional policies founded on populist feelings and collective fears are, plainly, doomed to failure and our friction-filled ties with India during the MR years should not have surprised the discerning.

It must also be noted that India has bourgeoned into almost a First World power over the past couple of decades. Given her present stature, one cannot see India being indifferent to policy initiatives and manoeuvres by her neighbours which could be seen by her as threatening her vital interests, whether they be of a security nature or otherwise.

Observers and publics must expect of India, conduct that is usually in keeping with that of a major power. It would be naïve in the extreme to expect things to be otherwise. India would always carve out for itself a major role in the affairs of not only South Asia but in those outside it as well. And given the current global power balance, it would be difficult for the world to ignore India’s voice and interests.

It does not follow from the foregoing that India’s neighbours should be subservient to her. This should never be the case but they need to be sensitive to power realities and act in harmony with India, as long as the latter does right and acts fairly, in order to further and protect their legitimate interests.

The Central Bank Bond Controversy Revisited

Groundviews




By Sam Samarasinghe and Dushyantha Mendis- 04/23/2015 
The Ministry of Policy Planning and Economic Affairs has on April 19 issued a press release announcing some findings of the three-member committee that Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe appointed
to look into matters related to the 30-year bond issued on February 27”(PM’s special statement to Parliament, 17th March). The “findings,” however, instead of resolving the issues, appear to have raised yet more issues.