Peace for the World

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

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Protests as Egypt's President al-Sisi welcomed at Number 10

Embedded image permalinkNews
Pro and anti-Sisi demonstrators clash as David Cameron welcomes the controversial leader, who is accused of mass human rights abuses.

Channel 4 NewsTHURSDAY 05 NOVEMBER 2015
Mass protests outside Downing Street saw opponents of Egyptian President President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and his supporters facing off.

New book spells more family drama for Jeb Bush

Then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush, right, and his brother, then-Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, tell a few jokes as their parents, former president George H.W. Bush and Barbara Bush, are shown on a video screen behind them during a birthday gala for the parents on June 10, 1999, in Houston. (AP/David J. Phillip)
Former President George H.W. Bush throws out the ceremonial first pitch to Houston Astros' Jed Lowrie before Game 3 of baseball's American League Division Series against the Kansas City Royals on Oct. 11, in Houston. (AP/David J. Phillip)
By Ed O'Keefe-November 5 at 9:34 AM
A former president is rarely publicly critical of another former president -- especially by way of a tell-all book. Even more rarely has one president been the father of another. And those categories have never intersected. Until now.
And so begins another round of Bush family drama tied mostly to foreign policy, this time in the pages of an authorized biography of former president George H.W. Bush. While generally supportive of his son's presidency, he criticizes his son, former president George W. Bush, former vice president Richard B. Cheney and former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld for how they responded to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unveils diverse cabinet in touching ceremony

Trudeau makes history with move to fill cabinet with equal gender representation; 15 of the ministers are women.

Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire arrive with his cabinet before his swearing-in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa Nov. 4.
 http://misc.thestar.com/interactivegraphic/2015/11-nov/04-trudeau-cabinet/index.html



Justin Trudeau says his newly appointed, gender-balanced cabinet reflects the country's diversity. The new Liberal prime minister pledged Wednesday to 'keep the promises' his party made during the election.


OTTAWA—Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unveiled his diverse, gender-equal cabinet to the country by strolling to Rideau Hall with his family and ministers amid waves of applause from thousands of Canadians.



Maldives declares month-long emergency after boat blast

emergency_rule






by Ali Naafiz
Courtesy:  Haveeru Online
( November 4, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Maldives declared a month-long state of emergency Wednesday in what has been extraordinary security measures following an explosion on a speedboat carrying the president and subsequent discovery of an arms haul.

Modi neck-and-neck with opposition in pivotal Bihar vote

Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses an election campaign rally in Banka, Bihar October 2, 2015.

ReutersBY ANDREW MACASKILL AND RUPAM JAIN NAIR-Thu Nov 5, 2015

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's nationalists and opposition parties were running neck-and-neck in elections in Bihar on Thursday, according to exit polls.
The vote is being viewed as a referendum on Modi's premiership after he addressed at least 30 campaign rallies, a departure from tradition in state elections, which usually centre on local issues and leaders.
"His reputation is really on the line," said N. Bhaskara Rao, an analyst at the Centre for Media Studies in New Delhi.
A defeat for Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party in India's third-largest state, home to 104 million people, would dent his chances of building the parliamentary strength he needs to push through reforms. His party is in a minority in the Rajya Sabha.
Four polls released after voting ended showed a coalition of regional parties would win the largest number of seats in the state. Two showed Modi ahead.
The coalition of local parties led by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is expected to win 124 out of 243 seats in Bihar's assembly, giving them a majority, according to a simple average of the exit polls calculated by Reuters.
The Hindu nationalist BJP and allies are expected to win 112, the polls showed - a worse performance than last year when the same alliance in the general election captured three-quarters of the state's parliamentary seats.
The record of pollsters is patchy, however, because India's first-past-the-post system can exaggerate the impact on seat shares of swings in the popular vote.
Party leaders will have a nail-biting wait until official results are announced on Sunday.
The Bihar election is seen as a barometer of many key issues shaping Indian politics; the changing roles of caste and religion and the rising aspirations of many Indians.
Modi's campaign started with a message of economic development but, as the race tightened, shifted to appealing to religious and caste alliances in a region where these have been dominant themes.
He has disappointed some supporters who voted for him in the hope that he would accelerate an economic transformation that began in the 1990s.
His administration has faced criticism for failing to rein in hardline Hindu groups that are campaigning on issues, such as a banning eating beef, that cut against the grain of secularism in multi-faith modern India.
This election is critical for Modi's efforts to win control of parliament so he can pass tax and labour reforms. The Rajya Sabha is selected on the basis of parties' strength in state assemblies.

(Editing by Douglas Busvine and Andrew Roche)

Arundhati Roy returns award in protest against religious intolerance in India

Novelist joins Bollywood figures and others in handing back awards, with many criticising Modi government for not condemning violence
 Booker prize winner Arundhati Roy says she is ‘so ashamed of what is going on’ in India that she is pleased to return her national screenplay award. Photograph: Mustafa Quraishi/AP

Associated Press in Delhi-Thursday 5 November 2015
The novelist Arundhati Roy and two dozen Bollywood figures have added their voices to the artists, scientists and historians by returning their awards in protest against a climate of religious intolerance and violence in India.
Film-maker Sanjay Kak, who was among film industry figures returning National Film awards in Mumbai on Thursday, said those protesting “have deployed their visibility – and credibility – to articulate the growing anxiety of a vast number of Indians, those who may remain less visible but are no less perturbed at what is going on around them”.
Roy, most famous for her Booker prizewinning novel, The God of Small Things,said in a sharply worded editorial in the Indian Express that millions of minority people including Muslims, Christians and members of low-caste or tribal communities “are being forced to live in terror, unsure of when and from where the assault will come”.
Already dozens of writers have returned awards to the country’s top literary institution, the Sahitya Academi, over disappointment that it has not condemned the killings of atheist activists who campaigned against religious superstition or Muslims rumoured to have slaughtered cows or eaten beef. Among India’s majority Hindu population, cows are considered to be sacred.
Roy said she was “so ashamed of what is going on in this country” and was pleased to return her 1989 national screenplay award and “to be a part of the political movement.
“I believe what artists and intellectuals are doing right now is unprecedented, and does not have a historical parallel. It is politics by other means,” said Roy, who in recent years has become a civil rights activist.
Many of those protesting have also criticised the prime minister, Narendra Modi, and his nationalist Bhartiya Janata party for not speaking out against religious attacks, saying their silence has encouraged Hindu hardliners to justify the attacks and assert Hindu superiority.
Communal violence and prejudice are nothing new for India. Hindu-Muslim violence claimed an estimated 1 million lives in the runup to partition in 1947. Since then, deadly riots and clashes have erupted at intervals, mostly between Hindus and Muslims.
Some people voiced concern with Modi’s meteoric rise and landslide election victory last year, warning that his support was grounded in the BJP’s Hindu base and noting that he had come up through the militant Hindu organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which translates as the National Volunteers Association.
Modi insisted during his election campaign that he would be prime minister for all of India and guaranteed protection for minorities. He has said little on the subject since taking office.
His administration has dismissed the growing protest as a political ploy to tear down the governing party.
“The entire purpose of these protests is to derail the development agenda of the Narendra Modi government,” the urban development minister, Venkaiah Naidu, said on Thursday. “The country is being subjected to damage and unnecessarily wrong information is being given about political intolerance.”
On Thursday, a separate group of writers, academics and artists came out in support of that stance and accused their protesting colleagues of political vengeance after Modi’s BJP election victory last year.
“A section of the nation’s intelligentsia has expressed outrage at a perceived mounting intolerance in society,” said a statement signed by 36 Modi supporters including the head of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations. “Failure in the elections is now sought to be avenged by other means.”

Cholera Is Coming

An outbreak of the deadly disease is sweeping across Iraq. But El Niño, climate change, and Middle Eastern instability could make the crisis much bigger.
BY LAURIE GARRETT-NOVEMBER 2, 2015
Cholera Is Coming The last great epidemic of Vibrio cholerae to hit Africa and the Middle East occurred from 1997 to 1998. Over 200,000 people were afflicted and some 8,000 killed as the disease spread from southern Mozambique all the way up to the Horn of Africa and into the Middle East. Now cholera is back. And this time it could be much worse.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

History of Tamil Struggle: A Response to Anura Kumara from R. Sampantha

 
Sambandan_Anura_kumara

Sri Lanka Brief
R. Sampanthan, (MP,TNA)-03/11/2015
There was a reference by my Friend, the Hon. Anura Dissanayake, the leader of the JVP, to international involvement in the issues in Sri Lanka. He made an appeal to the TNA in particular, that we should not rush to India; we should not rush to the international community and solicit their support because this is essentially a Sri Lankan problem and the resolution to this problem must be addressed locally. I cannot agree with him any more.
But I must also remind him that the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam Pact was not signed in New Delhi; the Dudley Senanayake-Chelvanayakam Pact was not signed in Washington and all other steps taken towards resolving the conflict in Sri Lanka amicably and peacefully were not taken in some European country.
Those were all taken in Sri Lanka.
What happened was whenever the Tamils agitated and performed ” satyagraha”, which means that ” satyam”, truth; you demand the truth and “graha” means that you bring upon the people concerned the necessary force to bring about that truth.
How do we do that? It is through ” ahimsa”, through peaceful means and through non-violence. We performed sathyagraha in 1961. We prevented government officers functioning in our districts. As a young lawyer, I was also held in custody with my leaders in Panagoda.
We know what happened. So, we did not rush to India; we did not rush to Washington; we did not rush to Europe. We wanted the issue to be solved in Sri Lanka. But, instead of solving the issue, we were subjected to violence, and that was the reason for the birth of the LTTE. The reason for the birth of the LTTE was that the issue was not solved amicably and peacefully in Sri Lanka and whenever the Tamils protested or agitated they were subjected to violence. That was the reason for the birth of the LTTE.
In our election manifesto in 1970, the Federal Party very clearly stated that we should oppose separation and called upon our people to defeat any candidate who contested on a separatist ticket. People like the late Prof. Suntharalingam and Mr. Navaratnam from Kayts were resoundingly defeated – forfeited their deposits – on the basis of the call by the Federal Party that we should not support separation and that we should defeat all persons who contested on that platform.
So, even the LTTE, in a sense, was created by you – by the leaders in this country who did not address this question. Tamil Eelam and the emergence of the LTTE were consequent to the failure on the part of the people in this country to address the Tamil question in a reasonable way and find a reasonable, workable and a durable political solution.
Even today, what we want is a solution within the framework of a united, undivided Sri Lanka that will enable us to live as equal citizens in this country and exercise real powers of governance without in any way adversely impacting on the unity or the integrity of this country in the areas in which we have lived for generations and centuries.
(- from the speech made by R. Sampanthan, MP on 23rd Oct during the parliamentary debate on the Geneva resolution)
Dealing with war crimes and rights issues

Hariharan's Intelligence blog

Col R Hariharan- October 31, 2015
Sri Lanka Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe tabled in parliament the UN Human Rights Investigation report as well as the reports of the Udalagama and the Paranagama commissions. The two commissions were appointed by former president Mahinda Rajapaksa.
 
The UN Human Rights Council resolution co-sponsored by Sri Lanka and adopted unanimously on October 1 calls for a domestic internal inquiry involving foreign expertise over the alleged human rights violations during the 26-year long war against the Tamil Tigers that ended in 2009.
 
The Udalagama Commission was mandated to investigate and inquire into 15 incidents of alleged serious violations of human rights since August 1, 2005.  The Commission has concluded the investigation into seven of the 15 incidents.  It found the LTTE had “exposed” the girls to the air strike at Sencholai camp, which was a legitimate military target. Fifty one school girls were killed in the air attack in August 2006.
With regard to the shooting down of  17 aid workers of a French NGO in Mutur in August 2006, the panel said it was possible that LTTE “perpetrated this crime to blame the armed forces.”  In respect of four other instances including the killing of 98 Navy personnel near Sigiriya in October 2006, the panel blamed the LTTE directly or indirectly.
The Paranagama commission  rejected the UN estimated figure of 40,000 as the number of people killed during the final phase of the conflict. However, it found the allegations of Sri Lankan army committing war crimes credible. It called for an independent judicial investigation into war crimes allegations. In an apparent reference to the “white flag killings” incident towards the end of the war, Paranagama has said an investigation team of the Commission would conduct an independent inquiry into the alleged extra-judicial executions of surrendered LTTE leaders.
Both President Maithripala Sirisena and the prime minister have made it clear the inquiry would be a domestic one, carried out within the parameters of the constitution. As the government sponsorship of the UN resolution has already drawn heavy criticism from the opposition, the government has the delicate task of putting together a mechanism acceptable to local and international audiences, while safeguarding the nation's sovereignty, judicial independence.
There was near consensus on a domestic mechanism at an all party meeting called for by the President Sirisena to evolve a broad political consensus. Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) leader R Sampanthan asked the President to “build a process for Tamils to have confidence in the authority. Hold an impartial inquiry where the Tamils could place faith.The government would probably set up a local mechanism with judges, prosecutors and defence counsel chosen by it assisted by expert opinion and technical expertise from foreign experts.
Sri Lanka’s dismal economic situation
The Institute of Policy Studies(IPS) in its 2015 report on Sri Lanka State of the Economy on theme of "Economic Reforms in Sri Lanka: Political Economy and Institutional Challenges" has examined many interrelated reforms relating to economic policy areas - trade and investment, labour market, foreign employment, education, health, social protection, agriculture and the environment. Given the array of issues, the report argues for coherence and prioritization in the design of reforms on several fronts, so that they add up to a plausible overall economic strategy to achieve sustained high growth in the long-run.
 
Speaking on the occasion of the release of the report Sri Lanka’s deputy minister of state enterprise development Eran Wickramaratne acknowledged that the government was facing a lot of economic challenges left over by the Rajapaksa government. He said the country was facing deficit on two fronts: current account deficit as well as budgetary deficit. Sri Lanka’s export share of gross domestic product has shrunk to less than 15 percent and global market share for exports must be reversed.
These sentiments were echoed by the Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran who said Sri Lanka’s tax system was regressive and needed to be boosted through fresh measures to reduce stress on State banks by loss making state owned enterprises. According to Palitha Ekanayake, former director-general at the Ministry of Rural Economy, the country’s foreign debt had grown from 36 percent of GDP in 2010 to about 65 percent; and it was likely to rise to 94 percent this year. Foreign reserves had fallen from US$ 9.1 billion in August last year to US$ 6.8 billion by the end of September this year. He added “debt instalment and interest obligations already exceed government revenue. That means we have to borrow to square existing loans.”
 
However, we can expect the government to face political challenges in executing difficult reform options. So inevitably, it is likely to temper economic reforms considering the political and social realities. This would mean a long haul for economic recovery of the country. 
 
Fishing in Sri Lanka waters
 
The apprehension of as many as 120 fishermen of Tamil Nadu  fishing in Sri Lankan waters during the month triggered the vexing issue in Tamil Nadu political circles. Sri Lankans had also impounded 40 fishing trawlers, seriously affecting employment opportunities for fishermen. Stung by strongcriticism of the state and central inaction on the issue by the DMK leader M Karunanidhi, a delegation of India’s AIADMK MPs met Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and sought a permanent solution to the problem. They also demanded the Centre’s immediate intervention for release of 86 Indian fishermen languishing in Lankan jails. Briefing reporters after the meeting, their leader Thambi Durai said the External Affairs Minister has assured them that the matter would be taken up with President Sirisena. The delegation also sought Rs 1520-crore special package for improving deep fishing facilities in Tamil Nadu.

Ironically on the day the delegation met the minister, 34 more Tamil Nadu fishermen were apprehended, underlining the urgency for finding a durable solution. However as Tamil Nadu would be going for assembly elections next year, political parties are unlikely to agree upon any consensus to resolve this issue for fear of a backlash.
Interestingly, on October 23 the Indian Coast Guard apprehended two Sri Lankan trawlers along with 29 Sri Lankan nationals off Chereapani reef in Lakshadweep waters for poaching of sea cucumber an endangered marine species. This underlined the problem also involves Sri Lankan fishermen fishing in Indian waters.
Written on October 31, 2015
 
[Col R Hariharan, a retired Military Intelligence specialist on South Asia, served with the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka as Head of Intelligence 1987-90. He is associated with the Chennai Centre for China Studies and the South Asia Analysis Group. E-Mail:colhari@yahoo.com  Blog: http://col.hariharan.info]

Alternative Left Groups to Stand by the Geneva Resolution

1343766286_Lal-Wijenayake
( General Secretary of the majority group of the LSSP Lal Wijenayake)
Sri Lanka Brief04/11/2015
Political parties associated with the Old Left movement claim there was no basis for the communal campaign that was presently being carried out by forces which were rejected by the people on 8 January and 17 August.
The Majority Group of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Alternative Group of the Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL) noted that these forces were attempting to create communal tensions to sabotage the reconciliation process at this crucial juncture.
General Secretary of the Majority Group of the LSSP Lal Wijenayake and President of the Alternative Group of the CPSL D.W. Subasinghe said that there were serious allegations of human rights violations, the truth of which should have been determined after a credible domestic investigation under our laws by our regular courts and/or special commissions.
Wijenayake and Subasinghe said it afforded some relief to see that the contentious resolution co-sponsored by the Government of Sri Lanka, and adopted in 2015 in Geneva, while expressing concerns on the ability of the Sri Lankan criminal justice system to ensure accountability, diluted the demand for a hybrid court and has committed Sri Lanka to an investigation by a domestic judicial mechanism with the participation of judges, prosecutors, lawyers and investigators from Commonwealth countries.
They added that it was also significant that the resolution emphasized the facets of truth, justice, reparation and non-recurrence rather than on punitive action.
“It is significant that the resolution shows the commitment of the United Nations Human Rights Council to the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka. This is specifically mentioned and it is also evident that our commitment is to work within the framework of our Constitution and its judicial mechanism. The process of seeking truth, justice, reparation and non-recurrence will be of help in the process of reconciliation. Therefore, it is our view that the resolution has to be worked out in such a way that our sovereignty and independence is not compromised and we see ample space to do it within the process of seeking, truth, justice, reparation and non-recurrence,” Wijenayake and Subasinghe added.
(Original caption: Old Left slams attempts to sabotage reconciliation)  BY Ruwan Laknath Jayakody /Ceylon Today

Sri Lanka's icon of colonial rule rises from the rubble

MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health stories
By AFP- 4 November 2015
As an army of labourers churns out limestone bricks, archeologist Prashantha Mandawala reflects on the ambitious task of restoring Sri Lanka's centuries-old Jaffna fort, destroyed by ethnic war.
The project has so far included the dangerous task of clearing unexploded mines and shells from the seafront site and scouring the northern Jaffna peninsula for scarce limestone bricks to use for the rebuilding.
Sri Lanka's separatist Tamil rebels laid siege to the European-built fort, branded a symbol of colonial oppression, during the conflict that raged on the island until 2009.
A Sri Lankan labourer works on the ramparts and moat in front of the 17th century Dutch-built Jaffna Fort that is undergoing restoration in the northern city...
A Sri Lankan labourer works on the ramparts and moat in front of the 17th century Dutch-built Jaffna Fort that is undergoing restoration in the northern city of Jaffna ©Lakruwan Wanniarachchi (AFP)

Toronto District School Board declares January as Tamil Heritage Month

Toronto District School Board declares January as Tamil Heritage Month
 Lankanewsweb.net

Nov 04, 2015
On October 28th, 2015 the Toronto District School Board unanimously passed a motion recognizing January as Tamil Heritage Month. This will allow public schools in Toronto district to celebrate Tamil heritage, culture, language, and history with not just Tamil students but all students from all backgrounds.

The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) is the largest and one of the most diverse school boards in Canada. It serves more than 246,000 students in 595 schools throughout Toronto.

Canadian Tamil Congress (CTC) congratulates Trustee Parthi Kandavel for being instrumental in passing the resolution and thanks all of the Toronto District School Board Trustees for unanimously passing the motion. 

In the TDSB student body, there are 12,272 students of Tamil heritage, approximately 5.5% of the total student population. Tamil is the second largest language group in the TDSB, as well as the second most offered heritage language program.

IUSF Protest (Photos)

Pictures courtesy Pavithra Jovan de Mello
Yesterday (3) some 5000 students belonging to the Inter University Students Federation (IUSF) marched from Nugegoda to the University Grants Commission. The students were calling for a ban on privatisation of education. The protest caused heavy traffic from Nugegoda to Town Hall, but was peaceful with no police disruption.
View the set of photos on Sway here.

Sri Lanka: Real Challenges of Civilian Policing

Once you demoralise and dismantle the morality of the department, how can you expect a disciplinary service based on moral authority?

Photo © by Roshan Chathuranmga (November 4, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) As his superior officer is on an official visit to Uganda, acting Inspector General of Police, Pujitha Jayasundara, has been thrust into the limelight. His appearance before the National Police Commission, a long term dismantled commission, pushed the refresh button under the new government, to defend his department in an engagement of establishing the civil obedience. He was summoned by the commission for the hearing on the recent attacks on the protest organised by the students from Inter Student Collective for the Protection of Higher National Diploma in Accountancy (HNDA).

Recent Police Attacks On Protesting Students & The Need For A Visionary Higher Education Policy


By Siri Gamage –November 4, 2015
Dr. Siri Gamage
Dr. Siri Gamage
Colombo TelegraphRecent police attacks on protesting students near the UGC shows several pertinent points about the state of affairs when it comes to resolving higher education issues.1) boiling issues in society quickly turns into law and order issues when they are not handled in a timely fashion, 2) the need for a culture of patient negotiation between those in authority and those affected by such issues, 3) the need for better higher education policy and policy development process with related research of high caliber, and 4) issues like those in higher education such as privatisation are political as much as educational and social.
Firstly, it is important to reflect on the current context where these student protests are taking place. The honeymoon period of the new national government is over. In coming months and weeks, various segments of society with grievances may come onto the streets in order to express their viewpoints and demands in a more agitational way. People need solutions to their varied problems after going through a turbulent time over the years and decades. Smiling faces of those in authority and excuses of various sorts will not satisfy affected segments of society. If solutions are not forthcoming, these segments, some of which are politicised, may resort to various agitation strategies with the potential to irritate the rulers. What is necessary are broader consultation mechanisms with the affected parties, professionals etc. in different policy areas and the development of innovative and creative policies suitable for the 21st century. Development of a higher education policy suitable for Sri Lanka should be a priority in this sense.
Obviously, the issues that took centre stage before the recent Presidential elections can re-emerge in coming months and years. Some bankrupt political forces can attempt to take advantage of situations like the police attack on students near the UGC unless relevant policies are developed and administrative solutions to the problems that students bring to the table are not provided.
One of the main issues concerning students and parents is the nature of hybrid education system being promoted in the country by way of free education and fee-education of which the latter is designated as privatisation. This is a phenomenon not limited to Sri Lanka. In the world and regional contexts, many other countries are facing similar issues, especially in a globalising and so-called border-less era. The issue to address by the government is not weather to allow fee-paying education. It has become a standard practice around the world with the dawn of neoliberal economic formulae –though many criticisms are leveled against the same from many quarters. It is what inequities are created as a result of introducing fee-paying education that needs attention and find better and creative solutions to address such inequities.Read More