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, October 27, 2016

UN calls for Yemen president to stand aside in peace plan

UN envoy's plan suggests Abd Rabbuh Hadi would agree to become little more than a figurehead after a Houthi withdrawal from the capital Sanaa
A new UN peace proposal to end a 19-month war in Yemen appears aimed at sidelining exiled president, Abd Rabbuh Hadi, and setting up a government of less divisive figures, according to a copy seen by Reuters.

Thursday 27 October 2016

Hadi fled the armed advance of the Iranian-allied Houthi movement in March 2015 and has been a guest of neighbouring Saudi Arabia ever since.

A UN Security Council resolution a month later recognised him as the legitimate head of state and called on the Houthis to disarm and quit Yemen's main cities.

But the Houthis and their allies in Yemen's army have said he will never return, accusing him and his powerful vice president, Ali Mushin al-Ahmar, of corruption.

The latest peace plan submitted by UN envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed suggests Ahmar would step down and Hadi would agree to become little more than a figurehead after a Houthi withdrawal from the capital Sanaa.

It was not immediately clear if the men had been consulted on the plan. But their supporters have in the past insisted that previous agreements recognising Hadi as leader must be respected.

"As part of the signing of a complete and comprehensive agreement, the current vice president will resign and President Hadi will appoint a new vice president," the document says.

"After the completion of the withdrawal from Sanaa and the handing over of heavy and medium weapons (including ballistic missiles) Hadi will transfer all his powers to a vice president, and the vice president will appoint a new prime minister ... (who will form) a national unity government," it added.

Symbolic role

The proposal would technically confirm Hadi in office, as stipulated by the UN resolution, but leave him in reality with only a symbolic role.

Yemen's prime minister, Ahmed Obeid bin Daghr, said the government had not received a draft of the peace proposal from the UN, according to state news agency Sabanew.

Government officials have said they are unwilling to legitimise what they see as a Houthi "coup".

"We emphasise our conviction that all proposals are doomed to failure if (they don't reject the) excesses of the coup, which is the mother of all these calamities and the root of the evils," Abdullah al-Alimi, a senior official in Hadi's office, wrote on Twitter.

There was no immediate comment from the UN, or from Saudi Arabia, which backs Hadi and is leading a military coalition, including the UAE, trying to dislodge the Houthis.

But the UAE's foreign minister, Anwar Gargash, expressed his support for the UN plan on Thursday, saying on Twitter that "alternative options are dark".

"The road map represents a political solution to the crisis of Yemen ... It is time to leave behind the logic of arms and violence among Yemenis, and the road map gives a chance for reason and dialogue to prevail," he wrote.

The ongoing conflict in Yemen has killed at least 10,000 people and unleashed one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition

Washington’s ‘Pivot to Asia’: A Debacle Unfolding

duterte-president-air-force

Washington’s ‘pivot to Asia’, enshrined in its effort to corral the Asian countries into its anti-China crusade is not going as the Obama-Clinton-Kerry team had envisioned.  It is proving to be a major foreign policy debacle for the outgoing and (presumably) incoming US presidential administrations.

by James Petras

( October 26, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) In 2012 President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Ashton Carter launched a new chapter in their quest for global dominance:  a realignment of policies designed to shift priorities from the Middle East to Asia.  Dubbed the ‘Pivot to Asia’, it suggested that the US would concentrate its economic, military and diplomatic resources toward strengthening its dominant position and undercutting China’s rising influence in the region.

Labour hit with record £20,000 fine over 'Edstone' tablet

The Electoral Commission imposes its biggest ever fine after Labour failed to declare Ed Miliband's notorious stone tablet of promises in its election spending return.
Ed Miliband with the

TUESDAY 25 OCTOBER 2016

The party commissioned the eight-foot stone tablet shortly before the 2015 General Election and the "Edstone" - inscribed with six key pledges from then-leader Ed Miliband - featured heavily in the latter stages of the campaign.

Mr Miliband said he would have placed the stone slab, which was widely derided by commentators and critics of the party, in the Downing Street Rose Garden as a reminder to the new Labour government to keep its promises.

But Labour left two payments totalling £7,614 relating to the stone off its election campaign spending return, a breach of election rules which sparked an investigation by the Electoral Commission.

The party was ordered to review all its election spending and was later found to have missed 74 payments totalling £123,748, as well as 33 separate invoices totalling £34,392 from the official return.

The party has been fined £20,000 - the maximum penalty allowed, and the largest imposed by the commission since it was launched in 2001.

The Electoral Commission found that the Labour treasurer Iain McNicol had committed two offences under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (PPERA) however no further action was being taken against him personally.

A Labour spokeswoman said: "Labour has co-operated fully with the Electoral Commission during its investigation into general election 2015 campaign spending by political parties.
Internal procedural errors led to a relatively small number of items of expenditure not being declared properly.Labour statement
"The commission's investigation found that internal procedural errors led to a relatively small number of items of expenditure not being declared properly.

"The party regrets these administrative errors. However, these amounted to just over 1 per cent of our total spending of over £12m during this election.

"We accept the findings of the report and have already tightened our internal recording procedures to address the commission's concerns."

The Electoral Commission said: "Initial inquiries aimed to determine why two payments totalling £7,614, relating to spending incurred on a stone tablet - referred to in the media as the 'EdStone' - were missing from the party's campaign spending return.

"It was established that these payments were missing from the party's return and the commission launched an investigation."

The commission has called for an increase in the maximum £20,000 penalty available to it for a single offence.
It is vital that the larger parties comply with these rules and report their finances accurately.Bob Posner
Director of party and election finance, Bob Posner, said: "The Labour Party is a well-established, experienced party.

"Rules on reporting campaign spending have been in place for over 15 years and it is vital that the larger parties comply with these rules and report their finances accurately if voters are to have confidence in the system."

Conservative party

A Channel 4 investigation uncovered compelling evidence suggesting large-scale and systematic abuse of election rules by the Conservative Party in last year's General Election and three key by-elections in 2014 that are currently being investigated by the Electoral Commission and 10 police forces.

With respect to both the by-elections and the South Thanet allegations, the Conservative Party said: "All election spending has been correctly recorded in accordance with the law". They also informed us that the omission to declare hostel costs in national or local returns was due to an “administrative error”.

Regarding the individual candidates, the party said: “All local spending has been correctly declared in line with the requirements of the Representation of the People Act.”

China's Xi anointed "core" leader, on par with Mao, Deng

China's President Xi Jinping waves as he arrives at a news conference after the closing of G20 Summit in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China, September 5, 2016. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj/Files
China's President Xi Jinping waves as he arrives at a news conference after the closing of G20 Summit in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China, September 5, 2016. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj/Files

By Michael Martina and Benjamin Kang Lim | BEIJING

China's Communist Party gave President Xi Jinping the title of "core" leader on Thursday, putting him on par with past strongmen like Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping, but it signalled his power would not be absolute.

A lengthy communique released by the party following a four-day, closed-door meeting of senior officials in Beijing stressed maintaining the importance of collective leadership.

The collective leadership system "must always be followed and should not be violated by any organisation or individual under any circumstance or for any reason", it said.

But all party members should "closely unite around the Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping as the core", said the document, released through state media.

The "core" leader title marks a significant strengthening of Xi's position ahead of a key party congress next year, at which a new Standing Committee, the pinnacle of power in China, will be constituted.

Since assuming office almost four years ago, Xi has rapidly consolidated power, including heading a group leading economic reform and appointing himself commander-in-chief of the military, though as head of the Central Military Commission he already controls the armed forces.

While head of the party, the military and the state, Xi had not previously been given the title "core".

Deng coined the phrase "core" leader. He said Mao, himself and Jiang Zemin were core leaders, meaning they had almost absolute authority and should not be questioned.

The once-every-five-years congress will be held in the second half of 2017 and Xi will be looking to stack the Standing Committee with as many of his own people as possible.

Zhang Lifan, a Beijing-based political commentator, said now that Xi was the "core", things should go more smoothly for him at next year's congress. But he will have more on the line, given his increased responsibility to answer economic and social problems facing the leadership.

"If the economy continues to go downhill and the rifts in society become more serious, the responsibility of the core is greater," Zhang said. "Your relative power and authority are greater, everyone is deferring to you. But they will be watching to see if your leadership is good or bad."

STILL A YEAR TO GO

Xi's immediate predecessor, Hu Jintao, was never called the "core".

An unofficial campaign to name Xi the "core" has been underway this year, with about two-thirds of provincial leaders referring to him as such in speeches, according to figures compiled by Reuters, before the plenum formally accorded him the title.

Steve Tsang, professor of Contemporary Chinese Studies at the University of Nottingham in Britain, said while Xi is in a strong position, there was still a year to go before the congress.

"There's still a lot of unanswered questions. Will his successor be named? Will Xi get a third term?"

Judging by recent past precedent, Xi should step down at the 2022 congress after a decade at the top, but speculation in leadership circles has swirled that he may try and stay on, perhaps giving up the post as president but remaining as party leader, the more senior of the posts.

In its turgid statement, the party also announced changes to the Rules on Intra-Party Political Life, first introduced in 1980 to prevent any cult of personality after Mao's rule plunged the country into anarchy during the 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution. But it gave no detailed explanation on how the rules would change.

While a cult of personality had begun to form around Xi, he has moved to stop practices including adoring songs on the internet and references to him in state media as "Uncle Xi", sources with ties to the leadership say.

"Publicity regarding leaders should be based purely on facts and boasting should be banned," the party said in its statement.

New rules on "Intra-Party Supervision" - code for how to fight corruption - were also approved at the plenum, but few details were given either.

The party will end the buying and selling of official posts, a common problem, and the selection and appointment of officials should not be "contaminated by outside interference or misconduct", the party said.

Xi has waged battle on corruption, jailing dozens of senior officials, warning the problem is so severe it could affect the party's grip on power.

According to past practice, a longer statement on the plenum, giving more details on what was agreed, should be released sometime in the next two weeks.

(Additional reporting by Sue-Lin Wong; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Dozens missing after migrant boat sinks in Mediterranean, says Libyan navy

Navy spokesman says boat set off with 126 people on board and went down in high waves

An overcrowded boat between Libya and Italy in May. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

 in Rome-Thursday 27 October 2016 

About 100 people are feared missing after a boat sank off the coast of Libya, amid mounting evidence that already dangerous conditions are worsening for migrants crossing the Mediterranean sea to get to Europe.

General Ayoub Qassem, a spokesman for the Libyan navy, said on Thursday that a boat carrying 126 people from the port of Garabulli had sunk after being hit by high waves, and that only 20 people had been rescued.

The UN announced this week said that 2016 has become the deadliest year on record for migrants crossing the Mediterranean, with an estimated 3,800 deaths so far.

The UN refugee agencies and other aid groups have said that the already-treacherous sea journey to Italy, which is more dangerous than the route to Greece, has deteriorated, in part because people-smugglers are using even flimsier inflatable rafts than they were before. The vessels are being overloaded with people – sometimes thousands at a time – making rescues riskier and more difficult.

The UN’s grim assessment for 2016 came almost exactly three years after the death of hundreds of migrants off the coast of Italy prompted European leaders to promise “decisive measures” to stem the humanitarian crisis. At the time, a group of European interior ministers said the deaths were a “wake-up call”.

But, far from improving, the situation has got worse for migrants making the sea crossing.

In Italy, prime minister Matteo Renzi this week warned that he might veto the disbursement of European Union funds to countries that refused to help Italy and Greece, which have taken in hundreds of thousands of refugees this year.

Tough border controls along Italy’s borders with France, Austria and Switzerland mean that attempts by migrants to reach northern Europe have become more difficult and that more are staying in Italy.

“Italy cannot take another year like the one we’ve just had,” Renzi said.

The sinking off the coast of Libya on Thursday came a day after the aid group Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said it had discovered 25 dead men and women in a rescue operation around 26 nautical miles from the Libyan coastline.

The dead were discovered after rescuers initially saved 139 people from a nearby rubber raft. When they returned to the scene, they found the bodies at the bottom of another boat. The likely cause of death was asphyxiation by fuel fumes.

“Sea rescue operations are becoming a race through a maritime graveyard, and our rescue teams are overwhelmed by a policy-made crisis where we feel powerless to stop the loss of life,” said Stefano Argenziano, the manager of migration operations for MSF. “How many tragedies like this do we need before EU leaders change their misplaced priority on deterrence and provide safe alternatives to the sea?”
MSF estimates that it has saved about 17,000 people since April. About 327,800 people have arrived in Europe by boat so far this year, and around 3,740 have died on the journey.

Separately, Save the Children announced that it had rescued more than 290 refugees and migrants off the coast of North Africa on Wednesday in two operations.

The aid group also recovered the bodies of 20 men and women who died before rescuers could reach them.

The group said several unaccompanied children were among the survivors, as well as pregnant women and families with small children.
Shinta Ratri, a leader of an Islamic school for transgender people, at her house in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Authorities closed down the school and have been taking a hard line on homosexuality. (Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images)

 October 27 at 2:38 PM

 Indonesia’s highest court is deliberating whether sex outside of marriage should be made illegal in the world’s third-largest democracy, in the latest push by conservative Islamist organizations to restructure the country’s relatively secular legal code.

If the court revises the law to forbid casual sex, gay sexual relations will become illegal for the first time in Indonesian history and straight unmarried couples could face prosecution.

The Family Love Alliance, a conservative Islamist advocacy organization, petitioned the Constitutional Court to broaden existing Indonesian law, which makes adultery illegal but does not ban sexual relations between unmarried people. A decision is expected in December or early next year, after the court hearings are completed.

Human rights organizations say the situation is very dangerous for Indonesia, which has a larger Muslim population than any other country. “This [petition] consists of discrimination towards all Indonesians.
Women as well as men, and those of diverse sexual orientations,” Bahrain, who goes by one name and is the director of advocacy at the Legal Aid Center, told the court at a hearing in early October. The center is one of several progressive advocacy organizations arguing against revising the constitution to ban sex outside of marriage.

A ban would “criminalize consensual sex outside of marriage,” says Naila Rizqi, head of legal affairs at the National Commission on Women. The current law punishes adultery with up to nine months in prison, and if the law is revised that penalty could carry over to unmarried sexual partners who have been prosecuted and convicted.
 
The case is the latest battle in the struggle over Indonesia’s social culture, which features a small band of progressives battling to maintain this Muslim-majority democracy’s relatively secular legal system against Islamist forces.

Activists fear that Indonesia’s highly conservative court will be unable to resist the opportunity to strike a blow for traditional morality. In an early court hearing, one conservative judge, Patrialis Akbar, appeared to affirm arguments made by conservative plaintiffs, saying, “Our freedom is limited by moral values as well as religious values. . . . We’re not a secular country — this country acknowledges religion.”

Although Indonesia, a rare example of a vibrant Muslim-majority democracy, does not maintain Islamic law at the national level, Indonesian conservatives interpret their country’s constitution to support loosely defined religious values.

Over the past 1½ years, gays have become a particular target of these religious values, with state officials and Islamic scholars repeatedly declaring that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people represent an unprecedented danger to the health of Indonesian society. Over the past few weeks, expert witnesses have given emotion-laded testimony on the danger gays pose to Indonesia.

“Can LGBT refrain from . . . free sex with constantly changing partners? They cannot. LGBT represents sex, sex, sex,” Dewi Inong Irana, a doctor, told the court, citing her experience with gay and transgender patients. Dewi also warned the court about the dangers of gay hookup app Grindr, which has since been banned by the government. “We have to protect this nation, ladies and gentlemen. Grindr is already here,” she said.

One witness, a Muslim scholar and anti-LGBT activist named Adian Husaini, suggested that the spread of gay rights is the result of a Jewish conspiracy. “Those who conducted the movement to legalize [same-sex marriage] were a small group of Jews in America,” he told the court. He cited a speech that Vice President Biden gave to Jewish leaders thanking them for their support for gay equality.

A lesbian activist, Lini Zurlia, sat outside the courtroom one recent day because of the overflowing crowd, wearily observing the hearing on a screen. “We can only laugh,” she said. “They don’t understand us and don’t want to understand us.”
 
But she worried that the Islamists would prevail. “Of the nine judges, only two judges have a solid perspective on the law. Seven of them ask questions that aren’t about legality or constitutionality but instead about religion or moral perspectives,” she said.

Nor is the LGBT community the only one at risk in this battle in Indonesia’s culture wars. Women’s advocates worry that a ban on sex outside marriage would be used disproportionately to prosecute women, in part because unmarried pregnant women would be an easy target. “It’s obvious this law will be a disaster, and women will be most affected,” said Tunggal Pawestri, a women’s rights activist.

Another worry about the court case, according to Santi Kusumaningrum, co-director of the Center on Child Protection at the University of Indonesia, is that only around half of Indonesian couples have been legally married, meaning that millions of couples with informal and ceremonial marriages will no longer be legally able to have sex.

“This law, when enforced, will immediately exclude the poor, the marginalized, people who live in remote places in the margins of public service,” she said.

While a ban on extramarital sex would be difficult, if not impossible, for the government to enforce, progressive activists fear it would empower local vigilantes to expose and extort cohabiting unmarried couples. This is already a fairly common practice in parts of Indonesia, although it lacks legal basis in much of the country.

In interviews, members of Indonesia’s conservative Islamist leadership say their side is ascendant. Hidayat Nur Wahid, former vice speaker of Indonesia’s parliament and a founder of the Prosperous Justice Party, an influential Islamist party, said he was confident that the law would be revised. He said that those who are not happy with such a decision should accept that the move would be democracy at work.

“What’s important is that decisions are made peacefully, in a way that isn’t forceful, in a way that’s rational,” he said. “This is democracy.

Progressive activists see the court case as the latest sign that the democracy they fought for 18 years ago, after the fall of the authoritarian Suharto regime, will be used to impose a conservative vision of Islam on society.

“The progressive groups at some point were successful at providing the space for democracy, but we really could not make benefit from the open space,” said Tunggal, the women’s rights activist, who said uneven economic growth is leading Indonesians to embrace religious conservatism.

“All the institutions that support democracy are there,” she said, citing state commissions to protect the rights of women and to uphold human rights. “But on the ground, it’s kind of the opposite. There’s a gap — a kind of lack in skill and knowledge — on how to reach out to the grass roots.”

Ulil Abshar Abdalla, founder of the Liberal Islam Network, is one of the very rare Indonesian Islamic scholars to support gay rights. He said he is worried about the current legal case — as well as the overall direction in which his country is headed.

“Conservatism is becoming stronger and stronger,” he said. “The kind of Islam we are seeing today in Indonesia is changing a lot.”

HIV Patient Zero cleared by science


HIV

BBCBy James Gallagher-26 October 2016

One of the most demonised patients in history - Gaetan Dugas - has been convincingly cleared of claims he spread HIV to the US, say scientists.

Mr Dugas, a homosexual flight attendant, gained legendary status in the history of HIV/Aids when he became known as Patient Zero.

But a study, in the journal Nature, showed he was just one of thousands of infected people in the 1970s.

It also showed New York was a crucial hub for the spread of the virus.

Aids only started to be recognised in 1981 when unusual symptoms started appearing in gay men.
But researchers were able to look further back in time by analysing stored blood samples, some of them containing HIV, from hepatitis trials in the 1970s.

The team at the University of Arizona developed a new method to reconstruct the genetic code of the virus in those patients.

And after screening 2,000 samples from New York and San Francisco, the researchers were able to get eight complete HIV genetic codes.

That gave scientists the information they needed to build HIV's family tree and trace when it arrived in the US.

Dr Michael Worobey, one of the researchers, said: "The samples contain so much genetic diversity that they could not have originated in the late 1970s.

"We can place the most precise dates on the origins of the US epidemic at about 1970 or 1971."

The researchers also analysed the genetic code of human immunodeficiency virus taken from Mr Dugas's blood.

Like a failed paternity test, the results showed that the virus in his blood was not the "father" of the US epidemic.

Dr Richard McKay, a science historian at the University of Cambridge, said: "Gaetan Dugas is one of the most demonised patients in history and one of a long line of individuals and groups vilified in the belief that they somehow fuelled epidemics with malicious intent."

The Air Canada employee was labelled Patient O (the letter, not the number) by the US Centres for Disease Control because he was a case "Out-of-California".

Over time the O became a 0 and the term Patient Zero was born. It is still used to this day to describe the index case of an outbreak as with Ebola in west Africa.

Mr Dugas died in 1984, but was identified as Patient Zero in the book And the Band Played On.

New York

The study also uncovered New York's key role in the spread of the infection.

Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo was seen as the city that started the global pandemic. From there it spread to the Caribbean and the US around 1970.

Dr Worobey said: "In New York City, the virus encountered a population that was like dry tinder, causing the epidemic to burn hotter and faster and infecting enough people that it grabs the world's attention for the first time.

"Just as Kinshasa was a key turning point for the pandemic virus as a whole, New York City looks like a turning point and acts as this hub from which the virus moves to the west coast and eventually to Western Europe, Australia, Japan, South America and all sorts of other places."

Prof Oliver Pybus, from the University of Oxford, commented: "This new data helps confirm the picture of HIV's origins in the US.

"It makes a very interesting point about Patient Zero, who has become a talking point in the origins of Aids, yet no matter how attractive a narrative it is, it doesn't have any scientific basis and it's really unfortunate that this person was identified."

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Governor responds to Jaffna uni petition in Sinhalese

26 Oct  2016

The governor of the Northern Province, Reginal Cooray, responded to a petition by the students of Jaffna University calling for justice over the killing of two students last Thursday by Sri Lankan police, by issuing a reply entirely in Sinhalese. 

Home


In response to the governor's letter, the president of Jaffna University's Arts Students Union delivered the note back to the governor's office, adding on to the bottom that they "could not understand" what the text of the letter said and reminding him that Tamil is also an official language on the island.


The killing of the students has prompted widespread protest across the North-East, with large scale demonstrations, hartals and public outcry as locals condemn state violence against the Tamil population. 
The students were 23 year old Nadarasa Kajan, whose funeral took place in Kilinochchi yesterday and 24 year old Pavunraj Sulaxan.

Land acquisition: Rambukkana residents demand compensation


2016-10-24

Residents of 12 Grama Niladhari Divisions in Rambukkana surrounded the office building of the Divisional Secretariat on Monday demanding that they be paid compensation for the acquisition of their lands for the construction of the Central Expressway. The protest staged in the Rambukkana town blocked the main road for several hours.
Video by Saliya Gamasinghearachchi

TNA asks how fleeing undergrads were shot from the front


article_image
by Saman Indrajith- 

The TNA yesterday demanded that an investigation be conducted into the killing of two Jaffna university students to find out how the rider of the motorcycle, and not the one on the pillion, had suffered gun shot injuries if they had been fleeing.

Making a special statement, TNA leader R Sampanthan said: "On Oct 20, 2016 two Third-year students of the University of Jaffna were shot at by the Police at Kulappidi Junction, Kokkuvil. They were both riding a motorcycle at that time.

"Initially the Police reported these two young men had died as a result of a road accident.  But the next morning it became clear that they had been shot by the police on the road. The rider of the motor cycle had died with gun shot injuries while the pillion rider died due to head injuries sustained as a result of the crash. The Police have since then changed their position and stated these two students did not stop at the police check point that therefore they opened fire.  

"While unreservedly condemning this unwarranted and unlawful attack by the police which has resulted in the deaths of two university students we demand that an impartial inquiry be conducted into these deaths immediately and the truth found out and culprits punished. This inquiry must ascertain as to how gun shots were sustained by the rider of the motor cycle and not the pillion rider if in fact they were fleeing from the Police.   

"I was with the President on Oct 21 when this news came and the President immediately ordered a special unit from Colombo to go and take over investigations. The suspects have been arrested and now remanded. Whilst thanking the government for these initial first steps, I wish to ask the Prime Minister as to what further steps have been taken to ensure that the culprits are actually brought to book including through independent judicial processes since serious doubts have been raised in the recent past as to the judicial processes through which high profile crimes seem to have been ended with no conviction at all.

"I also ask the Prime Minister what steps have been taken by the government to immediately ensure that such unlawful acts by law enforcement authorities are not repeated.

"It is imperative that the whole country know the full truth with regard to this incident."

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesighe assured that all the investigations into the deaths of two students would be conducted in a transparent manner and legal action would be taken against those responsible for the offence. He said the incident had come as a shock to the government and investigation were being conducted.

'எங்கிà®°ுந்து? எப்படி சுட்டோà®®்?' கொலை நடந்த இடத்தில் கைது செய்யப்பட்ட பொலிஸாà®°்!


 
25 October 2016

யாà®´்.குளப்பிட்டி பகுதியில் பல்கலைக்கழக à®®ாணவர்கள் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்ட இடத்திà®±்கு சந்தேகத்தின் அடிப்படையில் கைது செய்யப்பட்ட 5 பொலிஸாà®°ுà®®் à®…à®´ைத்துவரப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.

யாà®´்.பொலிஸ் நிலைய தடயவியல் பொலிஸாà®°் குà®±ித்த இடத்தை இன்à®±ு காலை ஆய்வு செய்துள்ளனர்.

கை விலங்கிடப்பட்டு விசேட அதிரடிப் படையினரின் பாதுகாப்புடன், சிà®±ைச்சாலை பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாà®°ிகளினால் குà®±ித்த பொலிஸாà®°் à®…à®´ைத்து வரப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.

கைது செய்யப்பட்ட பொலிஸாà®°் குà®±ித்த இளைஞர்களை தாà®®் எங்கிà®°ுந்து? எப்படி?
துப்பாக்கி பிரயோகம் செய்தோà®®் என்பதை காட்டியுள்ளனர்.

இதற்கமைய à®®ேà®±்கொள்ளப்பட்ட விசாரணைகள் மற்à®±ுà®®் ஆய்வுகளில் துப்பாக்கிரவை கூடு à®®ீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

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Wigneswaran appeals for calm as North Sri Lanka observes total hartal over killing of students by police


Srilanka total shut down
Total shut down in Sri Lanka Northern Province in protest aganist killing of 2 students by police

By P.K.Balachandran - 25th October 2016

COLOMBO: The Chief Minister of Sri Lanka’s Tamil-speaking Northern Province, C.V.Wigneswaran, has appealed to the people of the province, especially the youth, to be calm as they mourn the killing of two university students by the police.

In a statement released from London, the Chief Minister said that while conveying his condolences to the bereaved families, he would appeal to the people not to express their anger and grief in ways which would have unpleasant consequences.

Wigneswaran said that he would not comment on the incident before the court had given its verdict. All that he would say now is that the apparently, doctrine of using minimum force had not been observed by the police.

 University students Nadaraya Kajan and Pavunraj Sulakshan, who were on a motorcycle, were killed late at night on October 20, when the police opened fire on them at a checkpoint because they did not stop when asked to. One boy was shot in the chest and the other died when the motorcycle crashed. Both were in their early twenties.

The police tried to cover up the killing by claiming that the boys died in an accident. But the government medical officer had certified that one of the boys had died of bullet wounds.  

The hartal  called by all Tamil political parties and organizations, was peaceful and total. Government offices, banks and commercial establishments were shut as no one turned up for work. Schools and the university were shut. All public transport vehicles were off the roads from 6 am to 6 pm. Sources in Jaffna said that there were no untoward incidents. Students of ten universities in the non-Tamil speaking South Sri Lanka held demonstrations in support of the protest in the Tamil North.

President Maithripala Sirisena had ordered the arrest of the five policemen manning the checkpoint and a Jaffna court had remanded them till November 4. For their safety the policemen were sent to Anuradhapura prison in a Sinhalese-dominated area.
 

Bus stoned, group of youth assaulted in Jaffna

2016-10-26 
It was reported that stones were hurled at a bus while several motorcycles were damaged at Anaikkottai in Karainagar last night, Police said.
The Manipay Police received information that a gang of unidentified men arrived on several motorcycles had attacked a group of youth with clubs and damaged their motorcycles in Anaikkottai and fled.
Three youth had sustained minor injuries due to the attack, the Police said.
Investigations have been launched in search of the gang, according to Police.
Meanwhile, a group of men had ambushed and hurled stones at a bus in Gurunagar, but there were no passengers at the time of the attack, the Police said. (Romesh Madushanka)


SRI LANKA: Absence of Remorse as an Obstacle to Reconciliation

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October 26, 2016

People who live through long periods of repression often develop psychological and cultural habits that lead them to pretend not to see or hear what is going on around them in their society. These psychological habits may help people survive through difficult times. However, even after the difficult times have passed, cultural habits remain entrenched and people pretend not to really notice things that are going wrong in their societies. Creating the impression that everything is all right may be a way of maintaining some sanity and keeping up the pretense of being happy.

Sri Lanka is a society that has gone through a long period under extreme forms of repression. Since the 8th century AD, there has been a long history of repression, sometimes by foreign powers and sometimes due to the social institutions that have developed within the Sri Lankan society itself. That repression has created a habit among Sri Lankans of pretending not to see grave acts of injustice against people, even people who are very close to them, and thereby maintaining a silence even about matters that deeply trouble them inside. This is not peculiar to a particular race; it is spread across Sri Lanka, irrespective of race, gender, and other distinctions.

When we trace this back in history, we find that an enormous transformation took place within Sri Lanka during the centuries immediately following the 8th century, due to the cultural invasions that accompanied the Indian invasions that took place during these times.

Early Sri Lankan society, from 3rd century BC until about 5th century AD, was deeply influenced by the Asokan ideas introduced to Sri Lanka with the arrival of Ven. Mahinda Thero, who came as the messenger of the most powerful ruler of the time, Asoka. There has been enormous research in India about the transformation of Asoka into a just king, and on the philosophical and political outlook of Asoka, who realized that for the management of a vast empire at a time when there were powerful movements clamoring for greater equality, as against the draconian caste system which had been established in India in the past, he had to introduce a different model of ruling wherein the respect for ethical standards had to receive the highest priority. Great movements that were powerful in his time were the movements of Jainism and Buddhism.

Buddhism, in particular, was widespread, because people, particularly those who had been suppressed under the Brahmanical caste system, had gathered around the philosophy taught by the Buddha, which was one of recognition of everybody as human beings, and which required everybody to live ethical lives and accept that social responsibility would be key in dealing with all matters.

The change of philosophy, away from caste-based social norms and towards equality-based social norms, that came about during that time unleashed enormous creativity in India and Asoka took trouble to spread his ideas about the manner in which countries and people should govern themselves into all neighbouring regions. It was as his messenger that Ven. Mahinda Thero arrived in Sri Lanka, and he laid the foundation of cultural norms into a society and a civilization that was in its early stages of development. Thus, Sri Lanka was one of the countries fortunate enough to be influenced by a great philosophical and ethical tradition; the early foundations of Sri Lankan culture was based on this powerful foundation.

It was this cultural foundation which was attacked, for the most part successfully, through the Indian invasions, which brought along new philosophical trends that had lead to the virtual wiping out of Buddhism in India. The thought processes were led by another significant Indian philosopher, Adi Sankara, who developed a philosophy known as the philosophy of ‘Maya’, the philosophy of illusion.

He considered that only God existed and that nothing else existed, including himself and everyone and everything else, and this created deep cultural habits of doubting ideas that advocated ethical living. 
Ethics, along with everything else, was illusion. This philosophy was couched in Vedic philosophical language and Brahmins, who had lost power due to the spread of Buddhism, soon gathered around this new philosophy of Adi Sankara. There have been studies about how this philosophy was spread in India from village to village, both by intellectual means, such as arguments, as well as by physical force, by destroying people who refused to change their views and become followers of this new philosophy of Maya.

The same process took place in all pats of Sri Lanka and Adi Sankara’s philosophy was absorbed into everything, including the manner in which the kings ruled Sri Lanka thereafter. Like in India, there were also campaigns that went from village to village by Brahmins who were brought from India; they played a role in reorganizing the whole of Sri Lanka society on the basis of caste.

By the Polonnaruwa period, the social organization in Sri Lanka was done according to caste. In modern times, we speak about organizing societies on constitutional principles; during this time, social organization was done on the principle of the caste system.

In short, it was these principles that created the kind of repression that has shaped the mindset and psychological and cultural habits of all Sri Lankans thereafter. What are the principles of the caste system?

A few basic and fundamental principles:

The first principle was that a man’s status was determined by birth, which means that those who were born to a caste considered the higher caste (which amongst the Sinhalese meant the ‘Govigama’ caste and among the Tamils meant the ‘Vellalas’) were the upper caste; everyone who did other work, particularly physical work, belonged to what was called ‘Kula Heena’, the lower castes. Each male had to do the job his parents did and therefore their status remained permanent, one that could not be changed. Therefore, the idea of social migration, the idea of having a different status through ones efforts or acquisition of wealth, was forbidden in this society.

The second most important principle was the principle of disproportionate punishment. Disproportionate punishment meant that those who were considered to have a lower status were punished with the gravest forms of punishment for even slightest digression by them from the kind of behavior that was expected of them. For example, a lower caste girl who had had a sexual relationship with an upper class man had to be killed by the people of the caste to which she belonged. There is research material now available about complaints received in the early part of British rule about women being killed by their own elders in their own caste, due to transgressions of these absolute principles of marriage within one’s caste.

On the other hand, disproportionate punishment also meant that what might today be considered a grave crime, like murder, if committed by an upper caste person, either led to no punishment or only led to some minor penalty, such as the payment of some compensation.

This was the law. This law was enforced by its own inner mechanism. This became engraved in the minds of all Sri Lankans. The fear of punishment for the transgression of caste laws is imbedded in the psyche of all Sri Lankan people; this habit was engraved through practices that were carried out for a period lasting at least one thousand two hundred years.

We know from the studies on the formation of habits that something that is repeated over and over for a long period of time enters into our very inner psyche; it’s almost like it is entered into the genes. Though it is different to gene transformation, it does involve deep change among individuals who, for a long period of time, have been influenced by deeply-held cultural ideas that are enforced by strong punishments.

Once people have been taught to accept that their repressed status is their normal or proper status, they develop a capacity or habit of ignoring what others what would normally call a violation of their dignity, because they do not understand the idea of dignity as involving being equal to others. They understand dignity as being relative to a particular status and the kind of humiliation that is imposed on them is regarded by them as being part of their natural heritage. This caste heritage became the cultural heritage of the Sri Lankan people in all communities.

From that developed this habit of not seeing or hearing things that trouble them. If they see something as being wrong, and if they react to it as a wrong, then they get into greater trouble and do not achieve any positive result. Thus, protest in this society is not appreciated, because protest leads to greater trouble and there is no possibility that the protest may lead to a better dialogue among people, better understanding of a problem or the curing of wrongs.

The essence of caste is that social intercourse is done under draconian limitations, and that those draconian limitations are accepted as natural and normal.

It is this heritage that ran through that whole period, including colonial times. Despite certain influences from the newly-introduced administrative and legal models, which created some limited modification in the overall psyche, they were unable to erase this in its entirety. They could not, because there was no internal attempt to erase it entirely. At the inner level, the old habits, old attitudes and old prejudices remained as they were.

Then we come to the modern period, particularly the last fifty years, during which, due to various insurgencies and antiterrorism laws, a heavy level of repression was unleashed on Sri Lankan society in all parts of the country, in the South as well as in the North and East. These old habits of ignoring what is happening just before their eyes were once again revived. Just to take one example: an enormous number of enforced disappearances took place in the country, and in the global statistics, Sri Lanka has acquired second place in terms of the practice of enforced disappearances. However, the numbers of people who are willing to talk about this problem, who are willing to say what they saw, what they heard, and what they know, about the manner in which these things took place, are only a handful. The amount of writings, amount of reflections, either creative or otherwise, is at the lowest possible level.

There is no discourse on the violence that has taken place around people. This is due to deeply-held cultural habits that have come down through many centuries, and it is this that remains the basic obstacle to the development of a discourse on reconciliation, despite so much of talk about reconciliation.

Reconciliation becomes possible only when people are capable of remorse. When the people, having seen wrong, are able to reflect on it and are able to speak out on it, when people begin to acknowledge wrongs that have happened in their society and their own actions. Until this happens there cannot be a genuine discussion on reconciliation. Remorse is not possible when people have learned to accept wrongs as a normal part of life. If people have gotten into the habit of accepting the torture and ill-treatment practiced by the police and other law enforcement agencies as something normal, then they simply do not protest against it; they do not consider it as a wrong that needs to be eradicated, and they do not regret that such a situation is existing in their country.

These days there are a lot of movements throughout the world of people looking into wrongs in different manner. For example, in China, there are people who lived through the cultural revolution, which was a terrible period in Chinese history; they are now speaking about how they, as young activists and idealists, went into the cultural revolution thinking that it was a progressive movement, but who were used in order to kill opponents and destroy property, and today they deeply express their own remorse about what they saw, what they heard, and, sometimes, what they did. There are individuals who claim that until, in their own minds, they could feel that they had done something to atone for the wrongs they have done, they could not find inner peace.

It is that level of remorse that makes people capable of transforming themselves into practitioners of better ethical habits than what they have been exposed to. It is that which helps people reject violence and adopt a method of social discourse that is less coercive. That is the foundation of anything that can be called a democracy.

Sri Lanka is finding itself unable to start on the path of democracy because of long-held psychological and cultural habits, which are a result of the practices of the caste system. It has created people who, for most part, pretend that they do not hear or see the wrongs taking place in their society.