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, December 4, 2015

Is the San Bernardino Attack the Latest in ‘Crowdsourcing’ Terrorism?

The couple who gunned down 14 people in California may have been influenced but not aided by Islamist extremists. The insidious threat of homegrown terrorism and anti-Muslim rhetoric could prove a volatile combination.
Is the San Bernardino Attack the Latest in ‘Crowdsourcing’ Terrorism?
BY LARA JAKESDAN DE LUCE-DECEMBER 3, 2015
The San Bernardino massacre that killed 14 people in the worst U.S. mass shooting in three years appears to have been carried out by a couple who were inspired by — but not directly working with — foreign-based extremist groups, two U.S. officials said Friday. It points to a mounting “homegrown” terrorist threat that authorities acknowledge is nearly impossible to stop and could set off a potentially vicious cycle of Islamist extremism feeding anti-Muslim rhetoric — begetting yet more violence.
A senior U.S. intelligence official said the couple suspected of carrying out the assault — Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, a U.S. citizen, and Tashfeen Malik, 27, his Pakistani-born wife — had no direct contact to known terrorist groups like the Islamic State or al Qaeda. But Wednesday’s attack on the Southern California services center for mentally disabled people “was too planned” to merely be an act of workplace violence, said the official, who spoke toForeign Policy on condition of anonymity.
The married couple, who wore body armor during the strike and used assault rifles, had built more than a dozen pipe bombs and stockpiled thousands of rounds of ammunition, authorities said after searching their residence. And on Friday, a U.S. law enforcement official confirmed to FP that Malik had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State in a Facebook post, and then deleted it before the shooting.
Both officials said one of the shooters — it’s not yet clear which — may also have had contacts with a small number of people whom authorities initially believed were linked to affiliate extremist organizations, including the Somali-based al-Shabab, the Nusra Front in Syria and, potentially al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen. Those contacts were believed to have happened within the last year or so, and were not considered recent. More importantly, most if not all of those people were cleared some time ago by intelligence agencies, and are not believed to pose a threat, two U.S. officials said Friday.
Investigators were still combing through phone, messaging, and other computer records for evidence that the couple, who died in a shootout with police, had links or references to jihadis. An ongoing search of their house, where more than a half-dozen unexploded bombs are still believed to be lethal, turned up some materials referencing the oppression of Muslims, the intelligence official told FP on Thursday. The official refused to provide details.
One of the shooters contacted extremists through social media, the Associated Press reported, but the messages were not recent and did not indicate any coordination or plans for an attack.
State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner said Malik was issued a fiancĂ©e visa in Islamabad to let her move to the United States; he was not immediately certain of the year. The APreported the couple married in 2014.
Law enforcement and intelligence officials repeatedly said there was no sign so far the couple was ever instructed to carry out the rampage during a holiday party at the social services center in San Bernardino, California. Twenty-one people also were wounded, in the latest of a string of mass shootings that have killed more than 370 people this year alone.
The attack came just weeks after terrorists from the Islamic State killed 130people in a wave of violence across Paris, leading several European governments to order stringent new anti-terrorism measures. That the California massacre happened such a short time later and was also carried out by Muslims — both of whom investigators believe may have attended the holy hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia that Islam requires of its followers — sparked immediate fears it was an act of terrorism carried out by Islamic State or al Qaeda sympathizers.
Senior U.S. officials and their Western counterparts have warned repeatedly of the danger posed by so-called homegrown or “lone-wolf” attackers, who often have little to no direct contact with foreign extremist groups and are nearly impossible to track.
“It’s the hardest type of attack to detect,” former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff toldFP. And the online extremist propaganda that inspires lone wolves need not even specify a victim, giving the homegrown attackers wide berth to find soft targets and plan mass-casualty violence.
While al Qaeda tried to vet its recruits and select who would stage an attack, “this iteration of the radical jihadis tends to be much more willing to crowdsource terrorism,” Chertoff said.
Starting last September, the Islamic State appealed for attacks in the West as revenge for U.S.-led air raids against its fighters in Syria and Iraq. And volunteers with little or no firm ties to the organization have responded by carrying out deadly assaults in Europe, Canada, and Australia. Islamic State sympathizers have also attempted to unleash violence in the United States, including a hatchet attack against police in Queens, New York, and an attempted assault at a cartoon exhibit lampooning the Prophet Mohammad in a Dallas suburb that was derailed when police shot and killedthe two would-be assassins.
“It’s a problem wherever there are troubled souls with access to the Internet and that is everywhere in this great country of ours,” FBI Director James Comey said in November 2014. Radicalized by online propaganda, such lone wolves are “equipped to engage in their jihad without ever actually leaving their basement or bedroom,” Comey said.
But in some cases, it has been unclear to what degree lone-wolf assailants were inspired by Islamic State ideology or whether the Islamic State “provided a convenient excuse for violence that was already brewing in the hearts of the perpetrators,” J.M. Berger, an expert on jihadi activity in the United States, wrote in FP a month after Comey’s comments.
“For people who already have issues in their lives that might lead them to violence, the lure of such fame and personal validation may provide an outlet that is only ambiguously connected to the Islamic State’s radical religious and political platform,” wrote Berger, also the author of Jihad Joe: Americans Who Go to War in the Name of Islam.
That was the case for Army Maj. Nidal Hasan, who opened fire on a sprawling military base in Texas in November 2009, killing 13. Hasan, whose job performance as an Army psychiatrist raisedconcerns about his own mental health, is believed to have reached out to U.S.-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki in 18 emails in the year immediately before the shootings. But he never received direct guidance on how to carry out the attack, and Awlaki later said he never advised Hasan to harm Americans. Awlaki, the former spiritual leader of al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen, was killed in a U.S. airstrike in 2011.
By their very nature, lone-wolf attackers usually work alone or in very small numbers, Chertoff said, meaning that their threat is narrowly limited. That appears to have been the case in San Bernardino, where no organized terrorist group had claimed responsibility or involvement in the shootings as of Thursday. By contrast, Chertoff said, those who carried out the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris appeared to have been assisted by the Islamic State. At least one had traveled to Syria, where the Islamic State is based.
The shooting in California coincides with a recent turn toward inflammatory, hostile rhetoric directed toward Muslims in America.
On the Republican campaign trail, front-runner Donald Trump has said he would consider creating a registry of Muslims living in the United States, while closing some mosques to stop radicalization. He and several of the other GOP presidential candidates have criticized President Barack Obama’s plan to resettle at least 10,000 Syrian refugees in the United States next year, with Ben Carson referring to them as “rabid dogs,” Jeb Bush saying only Christian refugees should be allowed in, and John Kasich proposing to create a government agency devoted to spreading “Judeo-Christian” values. At least 29 Republican governors — and one Democrat — have said they won’t accept Syrian refugees in their states, even though they have no power to block the federal government from resettling them there.
Trump also has repeatedly — and wrongly — claimed that Muslims in New Jersey cheered as the World Trade Center fell in the 9/11 attacks.
Anti-Muslim sentiment reared its head at a meeting last month to present plans for a new mosque near Fredericksburg, Virginia. A man shouted at Muslims in attendance, “I’ll do everything in my power to make sure that does not happen. We don’t want it because you are terrorists. Every one of you are terrorists.”
Bruce Riedel, a former senior CIA officer and an author who has closely tracked al Qaeda and the Islamic State, said the California couple’s Muslim identity alone could fuel more hostile rhetoric — and, in turn, provide yet more ammunition for extremists to recruit and encourage attacks.
“My worry is that it will spur more Islamophobia,” Riedel said.
FP Senior Writer David Francis contributed to this report. 
This story was updated at 12:10 p.m. ET on Friday, Dec. 4, with new information.
Photo credit: Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images
Mass graves found in Iraq's Sinjar

The UN human rights group reported that no estimates on the number of bodies and the exact locations of the mass graves were given 
An Iraqi Kurdish fighter looks on as he stands on the outskirts of the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar as smoke billows during an operation by Iraqi Kurdish forces backed by US-led strikes in on 12 November 2015 (AFP) 

Middle East EyeFriday 4 December 2015
The UN reported on Friday that 16 mass graves have been discovered in Sinjar in northern Iraq since the area was recaptured from the Islamic State militant group last month.
“We have received reports that some 16 mass graves containing the bodies of individuals murdered by ISIL have been discovered in Sinjar,” said Cecile Pouilly, the spokeswoman for the UN human rights agency, using an alternative acronym for IS.
According to the UN human rights group, civilians were subjected to “gross human rights violations” by IS such as kidnapping, beheading, and burning.
Most of Sinjar’s residents belonged to the Yazidi sect, and were the target of a brutal attack by IS in August 2014 that involved massacres, rape and enslavement. Thousands fled, with most of the Yazidi population living in camps in the Kurdistan region.
The United Nations has described the attack on the Yazidis, whose faith IS considers heretical, as a possible genocide.
Sinjar was recaptured in a major operation by forces from Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region, with air support from the US-led coalition on 13 November.
Pouilly told reporters in Geneva that there was no information regarding where exactly in Sinjar the mass graves were located, or how many bodies were in the graves.
The commander of Sinjar, Mahma Khalil, said that 17 mass graves were uncovered on the outskirts of Sinjar but provided no further information or the estimates of the number of bodies.
Qasim Samir, the Sinjar head of intelligence, said that one of the first mass graves to be uncovered after the area was recaptured was near the town’s centre and contained the bodies of 78 elderly women.

Sunni residents face attacks by different forces

Attacks on the Sunni residents suspected of supporting IS in areas in Iraq reclaimed from the militant group were also rife, the UN said.
"Sunni Arab communities have faced increasing discrimination, harassment and violence from other ethnic and religious groups who accuse them of supporting ISIL," she said.
"Reports indicate that Iraqi security forces, Kurdish security forces and their respective affiliated militias have been responsible for looting and destruction of property belonging to the Sunni Arab communities, forced evictions, abductions, illegal detention and, in some cases, extra-judicial killings," she warned.
Pouilly described the attacks as "widespread" and told AFP they were particularly prevalent in Anbar, Diyala, Kirkuk, Salah al-Din and in the Kurdistan region.
"This has been going on for months, little by little as territories have been liberated from IS," she said.
She voiced particular concern for some 1,300 Sunni Iraqis stuck to the east of Sinjar in a "no-man's land between Kurdish security forces and ISIL".
"We urge the government of Iraq to investigate all human rights violations and abuses, including those committed against the Arab Sunni communities, to bring the perpetrators to justice and to ensure that victims have access to appropriate remedies," Pouilly said.
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/mass-graves-found-sinjar-north-iraq-873926835#sthash.UjzTXYsB.dpuf

Maoist cult leader guilty of rape and imprisonment

Aravindan Balakrishnan faces jail after keeping his daughter prisoner in a left-wing commune for 30 years and raping other women.
Channel 4 NewsAravindan Balakrishnan (Reuters)
FRIDAY 04 DECEMBER 2015
The 75-year-old Maoist ran a "hate cult" and demanded total obedience from his brainwashed female followers, who called him "Comrade Bala".
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama speaks at a conference in New Delhi in November. (Tsering Topgyal/AP)
December 4 
 China has mounted an extraordinary set of attacks against its own cadres in its troubled western regions of Xinjiang and Tibet, accusing some of disloyalty to the Communist Party, of secretly participating in religious activities, sympathizing with the Dalai Lama or even supporting terrorist attacks.
The accusations form part of a hardening of the Party’s stance both in Buddhist Tibet and Muslim-majority Xinjiang, experts said, as well as President Xi Jinping’s determination to push for ideological purity within the Party nationwide, with a quashing of intra-party debate and dissent.
But for critics, they also reflect the fact that the Party’s hardline approach towards crushing “the three evils of separatism, terrorism and religious extremism” in both regions has not only alienated many ordinary ethnic Tibetan and Uighur people, but also provoked significant disquiet in its own ranks.
Some party officials openly criticize policies handed down from above, complained Xu Hairong, the secretary of Xinjiang’s Commission for Discipline Inspection, making the unusual admission in a commentary published last week.
“Some waver on clear-cut issues of opposing ethnic division and safeguarding ethnic and national unity, and even support participating in violent terrorist attacks,” he wrote in his agency’s official newspaper.
“This does not mean the cadres participated in attacks,” said Nicholas Bequelin, East Asia director for Amnesty International, “but rather is the equivalent of local officials saying: ‘the central authorities are sending leaders who are so ham-fisted they have driven people to the edge and understandably they have started blowing up things.’”
With President Xi Jinping taking the lead in formulating policy towards Xinjiang, “everybody has to march to the same drumbeat,” Bequelin said.
An article on China Tibet Online, a Party website, published Friday, said 355 cadres had been punished in Xinjiang last year for violating “political discipline.”
One had joined a social media chat group entitled “Uighur Muslim,” that was meant to undermine ethnic unity, while another had reposted an interview given by prominent Uighur intellectual Ilham Tohti, who was controversially sentenced to life imprisonment last year on charges of advocating separatism, the article said.
Some officials blamed social problems on ethnic discrimination, the article complained, thus inciting ethnic hatred. “There is also a lack of faith in Marxism. Some grassroots party members even participate in religious activities,” its author Zhao Zhao wrote, adding that this would never be allowed.
Critics say there is widespread economic, cultural and religious discrimination against Uighurs and Tibetans in Xinjiang and Tibet respectively.
Indeed, in the wake of 2009 riots in the Xinjiang capital Urumqi, in which at least 192 people died, the Party acknowledged it needed to address Uighur grievances, said Bequelin.
But then, with violent attacks by Uighurs rising, the Party changed course, asserting at a major meeting on the region in 2014 that stability and unity were the priorities, rather than economic development and battling discrimination.
The imprisonment of Tohti, a moderate economist whose work had detailed the problems Uighurs faced, sent a strong signal to academics and party officials alike that the debate about discrimination had been closed, Bequelin said. Instead, the Party now vehemently asserts, Uighur terrorism is directed by Islamist extremists based abroad and increasingly rooted in Jihadi ideas picked up over the Internet.
At the same time, the Communist Party has also been recruiting, with the number of cadres in Xinjiang reported to have risen by 21,000 to 1.45 million in 2014. That has brought its own problems.
“The Chinese Communist Party believes that it is witnessing a ‘crisis of faith’ in Xinjiang and Tibet in particular,” said Julia Famularo, an International Securities Studies Fellow at Yale University.
“It has actively endeavored to draw ever greater numbers of ethnic minorities into the Party, but it now fears that these new recruits possess only superficial loyalty to the party-state,” she wrote in an email.
“Beijing laments that these minority Party members still make clandestine visits to mosques and monasteries, and that they still have stronger ties to their own people than to the Party or to China.”

In Tibet, 15 cadres were investigated last year and 20 so far this year for violating political discipline, China Tibet Online wrote, saying some had participated in organizations supporting “Tibetan independence."
Last month, Tibet party boss Chen Quango said the party would go after officials who held “incorrect views” on minority issues or who“profess no religious belief but secretly believe,” including those who follow the Dalai Lama or listen to religious sermons.
China accuses the Dalai Lama, who fled into exile in 1959, of trying to divide the country and prize Tibet away from China, although he insists he only wants meaningful autonomy for the region.
Xu Yangjingjing contributed to this report.
Read more:

Simon Denyer is The Post’s bureau chief in China. He served previously as bureau chief in India and as a Reuters bureau chief in Washington, India and Pakistan.

Today terrorism is our common worry

The bitter events brought about by blind terrorism in France have once again, moved me to speak to you young people.
    Letter
  • Nov 29, 2015
To the Youth in Western Countries,
The bitter events brought about by blind terrorism in France have once again, moved me to speak to you young people.  For me, it is unfortunate that such incidents would have to create the framework for a conversation, however the truth is that if painful matters do not create the grounds for finding solutions and mutual consultation, then the damage caused will be multiplied.

World's richest Hindu temple may move stash to Modi's gold scheme

Abhishek Bachchan and his wife, Bollywood actress Aishwarya Rai, perform prayers as Amitabh Bachchan (R) looks on at Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanam temple shrine in Tirumala, Andhra Pradesh April 22, 20

Hindu priests hold a replica of the Cricket World Cup trophy during a 'puja', or blessing ceremony, at the Siddhivinayak temple in Mumbai February 17, 2011.
Reuters
NEW DELHI Fri Dec 4, 2015
The richest Hindu temple in the world could soon come to the rescue of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's plan to recycle tonnes of idle gold and cut economy-hurting imports.
The gold monetisation scheme, aimed at persuading individuals, institutions and rich temples to deposit some of their gold stash with banks to recycle, has only attracted about one kg in a month out of a total hoard of over 20,000 tonnes.
But the Sri Venkateswara Swamy Temple, popularly known as the Tirupati Temple that is believed to have been the abode of Lord Vekateswara for 5,000 years, may become the biggest contributor with more than 5.5 tonnes of gold.
"It's a good scheme," said Yanamala Ramakrishnudu, the finance minister of Andhra Pradesh, where the temple is located. "We have already issued a directive to go for the scheme."
India is the world's second-biggest consumer of gold after China and the country's insatiable appetite meant imports of the precious metal accounted for 28 percent of India's trade deficit in the year ending March 2013.
Seeking divine blessings, devotees have offered billions of dollars worth of jewellery, bars and coins to temples over the centuries. Most temples are secretive about their stash and their gold is often stored in subterranean vaults.
Tirupati has already deposited most of its gold with banks under previous monetisation schemes that offer interest of about 1 percent, said D. Sambasiva Rao, executive officer of the trust that manages the temple.
"They (temple investment committee) will evaluate and whichever scheme is beneficial we are going to do that," he said, adding the temple will move its entire hoard to Modi's programme if convinced.
The new scheme offers annual interest of up to 2.5 percent.
Rao said the temple would take a final decision in the next 10-15 days.
The temple gets offerings of almost one tonne of gold every year and all of that could also be deposited under the new scheme once a decision is made, he added.
But Mumbai's two-century-old Shree Siddhivinayak temple, which is devoted to Lord Ganesha, remains unconvinced as banks accept deposits only after gold is melted down, leading to a potential loss in weight due to impurities.
The government remains hopeful individuals and institutions will participate in the scheme under which banks will melt the deposited gold and loan it to jewellers.
The scheme "will help in reducing our gold imports and save foreign exchange and deal with the problem of current account deficit", the finance ministry said in a statement on Friday.
India's DNA newspaper reported on Friday that India is planning to ban imports of 24-carat gold jewellery in an attempt to curb the misuse of free trade agreement with Asian countries.
(Writing by Krishna N. Das; editing by Susan Thomas)

Toronto students are tech tutors for immigrant parents

'It's fun to teach someone else, to give someone else your knowledge,' says Grade 6 student


cbc masthead logoDec 02, 2015
Today's increasingly tech-savvy children can certainly teach adults a thing or two about using computers.
And that's exactly what's happening at a St. James Town elementary school, where through the Youth Empowering Parents program, students are teaching new Torontonians how to navigate the web, use Microsoft Office and other everyday tech skills. Some students are teaching their own parents while others are paired up with adults or seniors who speak their native tongue.
It is a liberating experience for Valliammai Chettiappan, who left India for Toronto six months ago.
"After this class, I know how to use maps, how to know the weather," she said.
And the student-teachers find it equally rewarding.
"It's fun to teach someone else, to give someone else your knowledge," said Mathushan Ganeshalingam, a Grade 6 student at Rose Avenue Public School. "It's good to do that."
Youth Empowering Parents is underway in five Toronto schools as well as three other countries. It recently won a United Nations innovation award. Its organizers want to triple participants in the next year.

Mathushan Ganeshalingam and Valliammai Chettiappan

Youth empowering parents Toronto program
"It's more independence for me to learn myself," says Chettiappan.

Jenany Suganthan and Manali Paithankar

Youth empowering parents Toronto program
"I'm comfortable with her, she teaches me so well: simple language, simple English," says Paithankar of her tutor Suganthan, a Grade 6 student. Paithankar arrived in Toronto from India two months ago.

Shravan Suresh and Snehal Ingole

Youth empowering parents Toronto program
"It's a great experience," says Ingole, who arrived in Toronto six months ago from India. "Shravan is very good. He's a very good tutor."
Grade 6 student Suresh says at first, tutoring an adult, was "odd ... but it just came along."

Turkey detains 3,000 refugees after EU deal

Detainees, mainly from Syria and Iraq, were preparing to travel to Greek island of Lesbos from north-western town of Ayvacik
An abandoned campsite used by migrants and refugees in the Turkish coastal town of Cesme. Photograph: Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Agence France-Presse in Istanbul-Friday 4 December 2015
Turkish officials have rounded up nearly 3,000 people in the past four days who were planning to cross the Aegean Sea to Greece, local media reported.
The detentions were part of an operation launched on Monday, a day after Turkey and the European Union reached a deal to stem the flow of refugees into Europe.
The Turkish coastguard apprehended a total of 2,933 people, mainly from Syria and Iraq, as they were preparing to make their way to the Greek island of Lesbos from the north-western town of Ayvacik, in Çanakkale province, and sent them to a detention centre where some could face deportation, Dogan news agency reported.
Thirty-five suspected smugglers were also detained and hundreds of boats were seized, it added.
At a summit in Brussels, the European Union vowed to provide €3bn (£2.2bn) and political concessions to Ankara in return for its cooperation in tackling Europe’s worst refugee crisis since the second world war.
Turkey hosts more than 2 million refugees from the Syrian conflict and is the main launching point for those coming to Europe via Greece.
More than 886,000 refugees and migrants have arrived in Europe by sea this year, according to the latest UN figures. Nearly 600 people have died using the eastern Mediterranean route, according to the International Organisation for Migration.

Moneylender forces daily wage labourer to sell kidney in Sri Lanka, international racket busted

The Akola police discovered the kidney racket when they found the daily wage labourer Santosh Gawli's travel to Sri Lanka on a tourist visa suspicious.
Representational Image of a kidney dna Research & Archives
Representational Image
Thursday, 3 December 2015 
Daily News and AnalysisPolice in Akola have busted an international kidney racket, by arresting a moneylender who had forced a daily wage labourer to travel to Sri Lanka to sell off a kidney, in order to repay a loan of Rs 20,000.
According to a report in an English language daily, incredibly, the kidney racket may be linked to farmer suicidesin Vidarbha. A spate of farmer suicides in the region has alarmed the country, but part of the reason is the moneylenders' exploitation poor farmers and labourers.
The Akola police discovered the kidney racket when they found the daily wage labourer Santosh Gawli's travel to Sri Lanka on a tourist visa suspicious. The police picked the labourer up on Monday and found out the truth.
The police have also arrested an agent, Devendra Shirsat, who struck the deal for the moneylender, Anand Jadhav in Colombo. The role of a Nagpur hospital, where the preliminary tests were conducted on the daily wage worker before he flew to Colombo, is also being probed, says the report. The case shows all signs of being an international racket, say police.
Two more victims of the moneylender have been tracked down as well.
A team of Akola police arrived in Mumbai on Wednesday to gather details from a hotel in Mumbai, where Gawli was staying before being flown by Jadhav and Shirshat to Colombo, says the report. Gawli alleged that Jadhav had threatened to kill him after he failed to pay the third instalment of Rs 20,000, and hence he had no choice but to travel to Lanka.
Gawli caved in when the threats got deadly. The moneylender evetually made an offer - sell your kidney, get a waiver on your loan, and earn Rs 4 lakh extra.
Shirshat then arranged for Gawli's passport and visa. The Akola police also suspect that he served as a conduit between Jadhav and the Colombo hospital where Gawli was forced to sell his kidney.
Gawli was then paid half of the Rs 4 lakh he was promised. He has no idea about post-operative care and has received none in Akola so far, says the report.
Superintendent of Akola Police, CK Meena, said to the daily, "So far we have just registered a case of cheating against two as per the complaint lodged with us. Prima facie it appears to be the work of an organised syndicate, but we can't reveal anything since investigations are still in the premature stage." 
Meena said, "We will ascertain the role of the Nagpur based hospital and if any evidence of their involvement emerges we will take further action."

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Chandrika gets down to bridge building

... Tamils still receive letters from Govt. in Sinhala

 




by Zacki Jabbar-December 3, 2015, 9:27 pm

Only about five percent of employees in the public service are proficient in Tamil as the national language policy has not been implemented, says  former President and current Chairperson of the Office For National Unity and Reconciliation (ONUR), Chandrika Kumaratunga.

She told a news conference in Colombo on Tuesday that on ONUR’s  recommendation the government was in the process of selecting 2,000  persons who were proficient in both Tamil and Sinhala.

"Despite Sinhala and Tamil being official languages, Tamils still receive letters from the State in Sinhala. This is due to only

five percent of public sector employees being proficient in Tamil. It is a serious issue which needs to be rectified as soon as possible. Our aim is to secure language rights for every Sri Lankan," Kumaratunga said, adding that most of those being recruited were retired people but with the skills and experience to get the job at hand fast-tracked.

The ONUR is the main government agency engaged in coordinating, facilitating and working on the  war related reconciliation process.

It had  discussed the various issues that came within its mandate with many organisations and it was the first time such stakeholder consultations had been held, she noted.

Kumaratunga said discussions were underway to introduce a National Policy on Reconciliation, which would reflect the people’s mandate and policy of the State for reconciliation, building an inclusive society and stable  democratic  country.

Reconciliation, Kumaratunga observed was also not possible  without proper infrastructure development. So, the government had launched a five year comprehensive development programme for eight districts in the North. The Prime Minister, she revealed had directed the Treasury to allocate funds for the purpose. Since an official decision had been taken any shortfall in funds could be obtained from the donor community. Thereafter, partners from civil society or government able to implement the programmes under ONUR’s guidance would be found, she said.

Kumaratunga said that they expected to complete a great deal of development work in the North by early next year.

The government was committed to ensuring a durable peace through building bridges  between all the people. In that regard ONUR would implement diverse programmes for achieving its objective of national unity and reconciliation. She said that would include engaging all Sri Lankans here as well as abroad in building national unity and reconciliation, create an inclusive society by promoting social integration, ensure coordinated development planning at District level, support the healing process within communities, address issues of female headed households, bring youth and children to the forefront in building national unity and reconciliation, facilitate restoration of lands to rightful owners, promote and provide for a society that respected fundamental rights, freedom, rule of law, equality and diversity, treat and respect all citizens with dignity and non-discrimination irrespective of ethnicity, religion, language, caste, age, gender, sexual orientation, birthplace and political opinion.

Tamil Political Detainee on Day Release Robbed by Police

Subramaniam-nithikesan
( Subramaniam Nidikesan; Image – Radio Gagana)
Sri Lanka Brief03/12/2015 
A Tamil political detainee, held in a rehabilitation camp under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, was robbed by police while he on day release to visit his sick daughter at their home in Chavakachcheri, Jaffna, Sri Lanka Mirror reported.
Subramaniam Nidikesan made a complaint to the Jaffna Human Rights commission, saying that police men from the Chavakachcheri police station, broke open the gate, stormed his house and took away a motorcycle belonging to his wife, Rs8,000 in cash and the family’s personal documents.
He told journalists in Jaffna that police had wanted him to give them five bottles of liquor and money, adding that he has identified one of the policemen as Jeevan Lal of the traffic division, whom he had been seen when being kept behind bars at Chavakachcheri police.
Mr Nidikesan was arrested under the PTA in July 2014 and held by the CID and the notorious Boosa detention camp, before he was sent to the Poonthottam rehabilitation camp. No charges have ever been filed against him.
TG

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வல்வெட்டித்துŕ®±ை சேகண்டியில் இருந்து வேவில் வீதிகள் மற்ŕ®±ுŕ®®் ŕ®°ெஜின்பொஸ் வீதி வரை வெள்ளக் கடலாக காட்சியளிக்கின்றது.
கடந்த வருடம் கொŕ®™்கிŕ®°ிட் வீதியாக ŕ®®ாŕ®±்றப்பட்ட இவ்வீதிகள், தற்போது வெள்ளம் தேŕ®™்கி நிŕ®±்குŕ®®் வீதியாக காட்சியளிக்கின்றது.
அதுமட்டுŕ®®ின்ŕ®±ி, தற்பொŕ®´ுது வீடுகளுக்குள் வெள்ளம் நிŕ®°ŕ®®்பி வழிகின்றது.
வீதி செப்பனிடப்பட்டமை தொடர்பில் பலமுŕ®±ை எமது கிŕ®°ாமத்தின் பல ŕ®…ŕ®®ைப்புக்கள் சுட்டி காட்டிய போதுŕ®®் எந்த நடவடிக்கையுŕ®®் இது வரையில் எடுக்கப் படவில்லை.
வேவில் பிள்ளையாŕ®°் ஆலயத்துக்கு ŕ®®ுன் செல்லுŕ®®் வீதி (வெள்ள வாய்கள்) ஆனது வெள்ளம் செல்லாமல் குளம் போன்ŕ®±ு தேŕ®™்கி நிக்கின்றது. இதனால் மக்கள் அன்ŕ®±ாட தேவைகளை பூŕ®°்த்தி செய்ய ŕ®®ுடியாது உள்ளது. 
சம்பந்தப்பட்ட அதிகாŕ®°ிகள் வருகை தந்து உரிய நடவடிக்கை எடுக்குŕ®®ாŕ®±ு வல்வெட்டித்துŕ®±ை மக்கள் கோŕ®°ிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளனர்.

Boyle denounces Power's notion of "trust deficit"

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 02 December 2015, 22:55 GMT]
Commenting on US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power's statement in an interview to the Sri Lanka's Sunday Observer that "[t]he entire country [Sri Lanka] needs to feel that there is positive and concrete action being taken to move forward...The government has commenced a journey and it must deliver the peace dividend to the people by calling for truth, justice and an end to impunity," Professor Boyle, an expert in International Law, said "Power knows full well that what she is saying here is total baloney and double-talk...It is ridiculous and preposterous for Power to talk about a ‘trust deficit’ between the GOSL and the Eelam Tamils—between the Genocidaires and their Victims." 

Professor Boyle was troubled by the following response of Power in the Sunday Observer interview:

    Sunday Observer: During the meetings with the government leaders, what specific did the US call for?

    Samantha Power
    US Ambassador to UN, Samantha Power
    Samantha Power: The United States has repeatedly called for robust mechanisms and speedy actions to bridge the trust deficit that exists in the North. The entire country needs to feel that there is positive and concrete action being taken to move forward. There is a lot of international goodwill for the island, due to the recent political changes. The government has commenced a journey and it must deliver the peace dividend to the people by calling for truth, justice and an end to impunity.


Boyle said that "[i]t is ridiculous and preposterous for Power to talk about a “trust deficit” between between the GOSL and the Eelam Tamils—between the Genocidaires and their Victims. I do not recall Power ever talking about a “trust deficit” between Yugoslavia and the Bosnians—between those Genocidaires and their Victims."

Full text of Boyle's comment sent to TamilNet follows:

"In July of 2005 both Power and I separately attended the Tenth Anniversary of the Genocidal Massacre at Srebrenica in Bosnia and Herzegovina. I was there in my capacity as the Attorney for the Mothers of Srebrenica and Podrinja. After the Memorial Service at the Potocari Memorial and Graveyard located on the Killing Fields of Srebrenica itself, we both spoke at a Conference at the Holiday Inn Hotel in Sarajevo. Power knows full well that what she is saying here is total baloney and double-talk.

Prof.  Boyle at ICJ in 1993
Prof. Boyle at ICJ (1993) representing Bosnian Muslims
"When it came to the Serbian atrocities against the Bosnians, the United States sponsored at the United Nations Security Council the establishment of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia—not some type of domestic mechanism under the control of the Serbian Genocidaires. At the time, I was the Attorney of Record for the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina before the International Court of Justice, and arguing their case for genocide against Yugoslavia. 

"By comparison, with respect to the genocidal massacre of Tamils in Vanni in 2009 by the Government of Sri Lanka, the United States worked in cooperation with the GOSL Genocidaires to establish a so-called domestic mechanism whereby the GOSL will be able to cover-up their international crimes. There is no way the GOSL will or can deliver a “peace dividend” to the Eelam Tamils. This is because the GOSL has already inflicted upon the Eelam Tamils the proverbial “peace of the grave.”

"It is ridiculous and preposterous for Power to talk about a “trust deficit” between between the GOSL and the Eelam Tamils—between the Genocidaires and their Victims. I do not recall Power ever talking about a “trust deficit” between Yugoslavia and the Bosnians—between those Genocidaires and their Victims. Based upon her direct and personal experience in Bosnia, Power knows better. She was also behind me at Harvard Law School. As a self-styled human rights lawyer, Power has now knowingly become an Accessory After The Fact to the GOSL genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity perpetrated upon the Eelam Tamils," Boyle said.

From 1993 to 1996, when Power's and Prof. Boyle's paths crossed in Sarajevo, Power worked as a journalist, covering the Yugoslav Wars for U.S. News & World Report, The Boston Globe, The Economist, and The New Republic. When she returned to the United States, she attended Harvard Law School, receiving her J.D. in 1999.