Peace for the World

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

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Rotary’s thirty year fight against Polio

2018-10-25

Marking World Polio Awareness Day on October 24, Rotary International has worked tirelessly for a time period spanning over three decades to eradicate Polio from the world. Polio is a virus that affects the nervous system of the body and extreme cases may lead to paralysis. It also mainly affects children below the age of 5 years. The fastest and easiest solution to be immune to the disease is a simple vaccination. However, due to the lack of proper health care and poor access to clean water, the disease still survives in some countries and Rotary, along with other established organisations, work towards making the world Polio-free. 

This has been the longest standing and most significant effort taken by Rotary. The brainchild project for this issue began in 1985 when PolioPlus was launched by Rotary International. Mass vaccination took place under this program in 122 countries to 2.5 billion children. Further progress was made with Rotary working closely with the World Health Organisation. The Polio Eradication Fundraising Campaign also took place in the beginning of the 21st century. The most notable milestone was made as Rotary joined hands with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Throughout the years, the Foundation has been the main source of funding to the Rotary projects against Polio. 

Currently Polio is prevalent in three countries, namely Afghanistan, Nigeria and Pakistan. Until it is eradicated, the rest of the world still remains at risk. More than a million Rotary members have spent their time and resources in trying to help eradicate Polio. However, due to the lack of resources, poverty, health facilities etc. this has been a tedious task. Less and less cases of Polio are reported annually and this is seen as a positive outcome of the steps taken by Rotary. Collaborating with global ambassadors, including many high-ranking individuals as well as celebrities, the ‘This Close’ campaign works towards making communities aware of the effects of Polio and help in empowering those affected by it. 

For all these amazing initiatives being implemented, large amounts of funds are required. This year Rotary aims to raise $3.4 million to serve this purpose. In addition to this, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will double the amount for every donation given.  You can help us too. Simply make a donation on the official End Polio website handled by Rotary. Remember that each dollar helps bring a vaccine closer to one small child. Standing together, you too can assist in changing history and making the world Polio-free.  

Friday, October 26, 2018

Tamils in North-East protest in solidarity with estate workers struggle

Protest in Jaffna.
Tamils in the North-East have protested this week in solidarity with estate workers calling for a rise in their minimum wage.
Home24Oct 2018
Protest in Trincomalee.
As widespread protests take place in the South by tea estate workers, largely Malayaga Tamils, Tamils in Jaffna, Trincomalee and Batticaloa held solidarity demonstrations this week.
Protest in Batticaloa.
The workers are calling for an increase in their basic daily wage to 1000 rupees.

Tamil reporter harassed by Sri Lanka’s anti-terrorism police



October 24, 2018

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls on the Sri Lankan authorities to end the harassment to which the Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) is subjecting an independent Tamil journalist, Uthayarasa Shalin, on entirely spurious grounds.

Based in the northern city of Jaffna, where he reports for the English-language Tamil Guardian and the Tamil-language newspaper ValampuriUthayarasa Shalin has been the target of harassment and intimidation for the past two months, ever since he was summoned for questioning at TID headquarters in Colombo on 22 August.

The TID interrogated him about his coverage of a completely innocuous annual festival in a Hindu temple in June for Valampuriand, in particular, about a photo taken inside the temple in which a map of the traditional Tamil homeland in the north and east of the country could be seen in the background.

Although Shalin had no role in the organization of the festival or the temple’s decoration, this apparently insignificant detail has been the grounds for the harassment to which he has been subjected ever since.

He was not allowed to bring his lawyer to the first interrogation, which seemed more like a long series of threats. His interrogators said, for example: “If this had happened two years ago, we wouldn’t have questioned you like this, we would have hung you upside down and then made you disappear.”

Constant harassment

Ever since then, Shalin has been the target of constant harassment by the police in Jaffna that has included arrests and insults. The acts of intimidation have increased this month, with five of his friends and relatives being summoned for interrogation by the TID, including his brother Jelsin on 17 October.

“We call on the Sri Lankan authorities to put an immediate stop to this harassment of a journalist who is universally respected for the quality of is reporting and his coverage of human rights violations,” said Daniel Bastard, the head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk.

“These acts of intimidation, which are clearly designed to silence Uthayarasa Shalin, recall the worst period of persecution of Sri Lanka’s Tamil journalists. The government in Colombo must demonstrate a determination not to return that disastrous past.”

Impunity

According to RSF’s press freedom barometer, at least 15 journalists were murdered in Sri Lanka during the 2000s, a terrible decade in which fighting intensified between government forces and Tamil rebels and the rebellion was finally crushed in 2009. Most of those murders are still unpunished.

RSF will tomorrow publish the findings of its Media Ownership Monitor survey of Sri Lanka, which is ranked 131st out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2018 World Press Freedom Index.

The disappeared documented in case collection



2018-10-25 

The mother of a boy who disappeared when he was then 20 year old says, “Without my husband and son, I am sick and frustrated,”. Kandhasami Mariyayi, another mother whose son disappeared at 21 says, “I hope to see my children before my death. I made a complaint with the police and before the presidential commission regarding my children. So far there has been no finding.

This is how our life goes,” says another disheartened mother of a 17-year-old.

These mothers’ testimonies and despair of not knowing the fate of their children are a few of 414 stories documented in ‘Recordings of Hidden People - Part II’, which was launched recently at the auditorium of the International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES). 
Silence in the public sphere on the issue of disappearance can cause collective amnesia which can have dangerous consequences and entrench a culture of impunity
Aritharan Sivanesamalar’s husband did not return home as usual after completing his work for the day at the paddy field. She has been toiling hard to bring up her son who was eventually arrested by the Sri Lankan forces in 2008 and released after four years. The mother of two children, Lingam Mankayarkarasi’s husband went to buy vadei and string hoppers when he disappeared. Soon afterwards she lost her job too and maintaining her family was a nightmare. “I am living with so much distress,” she says. 

Similar stories of untold sorrow envelope the pages of the case collection which is aimed at being a source of information to the Office on Missing Persons, The Human Rights Commission and the Right to Information Commission. 

The recent edition of the book documents the stories of persons from Vavuniya. The previous edition published last year documented the stories of enforced disappearances from the Mannar district. The book notes that the actual number of disappearances within the Vavuniya district exceeds 414 to about 550. Of the 414 stories documented, 364 are men and 51 are women. Hundred and eight are children below 18 years of age. Speaking at the launch Ambika Satkunanthan, a Commissioner at the Human Rights Commission said that the data presented was “disturbing, but not surprising.”

  “Enforced disappearance was a tool that was used to crush dissent and to stifle opposition,” she said. 

Pointing out the importance of documenting the stories she said that the sense of horror associated with a disappearance was no longer present. “We need to document human rights violations, stories of not only victims but also their families and communities because the impact of a violation is not only on the victim but also on the broader community,” she said. She added that such stories should be used to create awareness about the history of the country especially among the youth.
 
Only five people among those who have shared their stories in the collection, have filed Habeas Corpus cases. According to the testimonies, 188 persons have allegedly been abducted by State military, 208 by unknown persons and 18 by Tamil militant groups. 

“Because of the nature of the methods used in carrying out disappearances it is often difficult to piece together what happened to a person to enable an investigation to take place. Hence narratives of people are the key in the search for the truth,” said Satkunanathan. 

“Silence in the public sphere on the issue of disappearance can cause collective amnesia which can have dangerous consequences and entrench a culture of impunity. A culture of impunity and lack of accountability is something we’ve encountered in Sri Lanka during successive regimes in the past 30 years,” she added. 

She also highlighted that in the case of ethnic violence, perpetrators often believed that they were fighting for a just cause and not that they have perpetrated a human rights violation. “This means that perpetrators will also have overwhelming public support which in turn will prevent the government from prosecuting those responsible for these violations,” she said. 
Because of the nature of the methods used in carrying out disappearances it is often difficult to piece together what happened to a person to enable an investigation to take place. 
Meanwhile, Attorney-at-Law, Subajini Kisho Anton who is the Director of Law and Human Rights Centre, Jaffna pointed out how the mothers of the disappeared have been protesting on the roadside for more than 600 days in the North and how there has been no response. She stressed that both Tamils and the Sinhalese have been affected by enforced disappearances. 


“Have the white vans gone away?” she quizzed. “They won’t go away unless the government is willing to counter impunity,” she stressed.
 
“In an environment where accountability is not possible, we must try to treasure the evidence. We must document (these stories) with the hope justice will be delivered someday,” she said speaking about the case collection that was launched. 

What is enforced disappearance?

Article 2 of the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance states, 

“Enforced disappearance” is considered to be the arrest, detention, abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty by agents of the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with the authorization, support or acquiescence of the State, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place such a person outside the protection of the law.  

A small victory for victims




Oct 24, 2018

Earlier this year, the Sri Lanka Campaign was one of several organisations who raised the alarm about the growing number of Sri Lankan troops being dispatched to UN peacekeeping missions – despite unaddressed allegations of grave human rights violations by the Sri Lankan military, and amid serious concerns about measures designed to ‘filter out’ problematic individuals.

In an open letter in May, we urged the United Nations Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, to ensure that procedures in place to vet and screen Sri Lankan troops were sufficiently rigorous and, where necessary, to act to remove from peacekeeping missions those who may have evaded them.
Last Friday saw the culmination of the pressure brought to bear by various human rights groups, politicians and concerned citizens, with the announcement by official spokesperson Stephane Dujarric that the United Nations had asked the government of Sri Lanka to immediately repatriate Lt. Col. Kalana Amunupure, the commander of its 200-strong troop contingent assigned to a peacekeeping assignment in Mali.

While the UN is yet to provide a full public explanation of its decision – stating only that it followed “a review of the human rights background of the commander … based on recently reviewed information” – the move follows the recent submission of a dossier on Amanpure’s war record by the International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP).

What the dossier said (a summary from ITJP’s press release):

“During the final phase of Sri Lanka’s civil war in 2009 Amunupure was second in command of the 11th Sri Lanka Light Infantry which operated under the 58th Division. A UN Investigation in 2015 found reasonable grounds to say the 58th Division was involved in the repeated shelling of UN sites and hospitals as well as the killing of surrendees and torture. Amunupure’s unit is named in contemporaneous sources, including government reports, as having been involved in the assaults on Puthukkudiyiruppu (PTK) town in February 2009 and Putumattalan in March 2009, both of which involved extensive civilian casualties. The UN report described doctors in Putumattalan being unable to reach the dead and dying because of intense shelling and gunfire. At the time the ICRC, which rarely makes public statements, called the impact of the military’s attacks on densely populated civilian areas near Putumattalan’s makeshift hospital ‘nothing short of catastrophic’.”
According to UN officials, the repatriation will be carried out at Sri Lanka’s cost and according to normal procedures. The government of Sri Lanka, though apparently intending to comply with the decision, is reported to be planning to appeal the decision and will seek the commander’s reinstatement.

While the repatriation stands as a small victory for the victims and survivors of abuses by Sri Lankan soldiers, the truth is that such a state of affairs should never have been allowed to arise in the first place. A cursory review of Amunupure’s background in early 2017, when the members of the proposed contingent to Mali should have come before the UN and Sri Lanka’s National Human Rights Commission (two of the bodies responsible for conducting vetting), ought to have led to a red flag being placed over the commander’s name. Recent comments from the Chair of the National Human Rights Commission, highlighting the manner in which the government appears to have successfully circumvented full and proper scrutiny of the contingent, raise further questions about whether these processes are fit for purpose and if, in any case, the government of Sri Lanka can be trusted to respect and abide by them.

Further still, there remains the broader question of whether any Sri Lankan troops should be deployed as peacekeepers, so long as the government continues to shield from justice those responsible for grave human rights violations – including those involved in the systematic rape of children during a peacekeeping deployment in Haiti between 2004-2007. It is a question that is especially pressing in light of Security Council Resolution 2272, which specifically empowers the UN Secretary-General to determine member state participation in peacekeeping missions, based on their progress in investigating and holding accountable the perpetrators of sexual abuse and exploitation.

To the many victims of serious human rights abuses by Sri Lankan soldiers who are yet to receive justice, the knowledge that hundreds of Sri Lankan troops are currently stationed among some of the world’s most vulnerable populations will be as offensive as it is deeply troubling.

It is a situation that is all the more galling in view of the Sri Lankan state’s determined effort to use its role in UN peacekeeping as a way to rehabilitate the image of its armed forces on the world stage.

In January of this year, the Sri Lankan army had described the Mali deployment as “one more feather in its cap”. Similar self-adulation followed the grotesque recent appointment of the government of Sri Lanka – an alleged user of cluster munitions against its citizens in 2009 – to the Presidency of the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Therefore while we commend the UN’s recent decision, it is clear that a much wider re-think is required – both within the UN, and among the international community at large – about how they engage with the Sri Lanka in a way that prioritises the interests, dignity and rights of victims. For if those victims are ignored, they will surely not be the last.

Wigneswaran slams Colombo, Tamil leadership

C.V. Wigneswaran, Chief Minister, Northern Province.   | Photo Credit: M_VEDHAN
C.V. Wigneswaran, Chief Minister, Northern Province.

Oppn. leader Thavarajah counters him; calls for honest reflection on ‘failure’

OCTOBER 23, 2018

Return to frontpageSri Lanka’s Northern Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran on Tuesday slammed the Colombo government and his own Tamil leadership, holding them responsible for the perceived failure of the Northern Provincial Council to deliver on its promises to the war-affected Tamils.

Speaking at the last sitting of the Council — which was elected to power in September 2013 in a historic, post-war election — Mr. Wigneswaran cited continuing militarisation, recent military-backed Sinhalese settlements in the Tamil-majority province, the emergence of Buddhist shrines, and the inadequacy of funds as signs of the Centre’s reluctance to devolve any power to the Tamil minority. Economic development, he said, can never be a substitute of the people’s rights, urging the Tamils to be wary of such promises.

Former strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa, during his second term as President, called the island’s first ever northern provincial election. The announcement was significant, given that the last election in the erstwhile North-Eastern Province was in 1988. The Tamil National Alliance (TNA), the main formation representing northern Tamils, nominated former Supreme Court Judge Wigneswaran as its candidate, and won a massive mandate in the polls with nearly 80% of the vote.

However, in the Council’s five-year term since, the CM and the TNA leadership have had open disagreements over a range of matters, including political positions, and the extent of dialogue needed with the Centre, with the Chief Minister often opting for boycott over engagement that he saw as a compromise. So much so that Mr. Wigneswaran openly endorsed the TNA’s political rivals in the 2015 parliamentary elections.

The discord escalated in June last year, with a majority of Council members deciding to withdraw their support to the CM in the Council. Following discussions with TNA leader R. Sampanthan, also the Leader of Opposition in Parliament, a no-confidence motion at the Council was averted.

In his address to the Council on Tuesday, Mr. Wigneswaran said the TNA leadership had not asked him even once in the last five years what his vision was, what were the challenges he faced, how can they be taken up in Parliament and outside. “I had no prior experience in politics. They dragged me into it, virtually pushing me into the waters and saying: ‘you get used to swimming’, he said. The CM is scheduled to give a public talk on the future of Tamil politics on Wednesday, where he is likely to spell out his own political plans.

In a strong counter to the CM’s speech, Leader of Opposition at the Council Sinnadurai Thavarajah — elected from the Eelam People’s Democratic Party (EPDP) — said the Council, which had passed 444 resolutions, had passed merely 15 statues necessary to push projects administratively. “Most resolutions are meaningless and were simply aimed at media publicity,” he told The Hindu.

Accusing the CM of opting for “arm chair politics”, he asked if the Council under his leadership could take credit for implementing any initiative that inspires confidence in the minds of the people. Challenging Mr. Wigneswaran’s claim about insufficient funds, Mr. Thavarajah said that even with the available funding, the Council failed to meaningfully implement projects that could benefit the people.

National Budget

Everybody wants the support of the government to have a good life. On one hand, economists recommend the government to fix all macroeconomic ills whether it is general inflation or high cost of living or low economic growth or balance of payment (BOP) deficit or currency depreciation or unemployment or household income disparity or elephant attacks (or human attacks on elephants) or recovery from wars or disasters (floods, droughts, earthquakes) or social backwardness. On the other hand, they all find the government as the scapegoat for all those ills, social and economic. Everything we tell the government to do or what it does will end up in the national budget, mostly as expenditure and debt, as things we propose for income are virtually rare.
National Budget.docx by on Scribd

Wigneswaran’s new party: Debut at PC polls or Presidential election?


article_image
By C. A. Chandraprema- 

Former Chief Minister of the now dissolved Northern Provincial Council C. V. Wigneswaran made the long anticipated move to form a separate political party, last Wednesday, in Jaffna and announced the formation of the Tamil Makkal Kuttani, which translated into English means the Tamil People’s Alliance. The rift that was simmering within the TNA in the past few years has now come into the open. This will have implications not merely for the politics of the North but for Southern politics as well. From the time democratic politics based on universal franchise began in this country, the North has always been dominated by one political party.

From the years preceding Independence up to the mid-1950s it was the Tamil Congress led by G. G. Ponnambalam that called the shots in the North. From the mid-1950s to the early 1980s, it was the Ilangei Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), led first by S. J. V. Chelvanayagam and later by A. Amirthalingam, which did so. From the early 1980s to 2009 Northern politics was dominated by terrorist groups, primarily the LTTE. After the LTTE was defeated, the Tamil National Alliance, which was formed by the remnants of the old ITAK and some former armed groups, gained ascendency. After a decade of dominating Northern politics, the TNA is now under criticism for not delivering on their promises.

Between the parliamentary election of 2015 and the local government elections of 2018, the votes polled by the TNA in the Tamil heartlands of Jaffna and Batticaloa have drastically decreased. The Akila Illankei (All Ceylon) Tamil Congress led by Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam won two local governments institutions outright – the Point Pedro UC and the Chavakachcheri UC–– and won a lot of seats in many other local government institutions. It was under the ACTC that the dissident group led by Wigneswaran was for the most part accommodated. If we take the iconic Jaffna Municipal Council, the TNA won 16 seats and the ACTC 13. The TNA was able to get one of their members appointed as Mayor only with the support of the 10 Members of the EPDP.

The ACTC managed to make such inroads into the TNA vote base without Wigneswaran, the shadow leader of the group, being able to campaign for it. There is no evidence that Wigneswaran even made noises in support of the ACTC during the last local government election. Even though Wigneswaran does not have the charisma of Mahinda Rajapaksa, the performance of the ACTC was a bit like the Podujana Peramuna facing the local government elections without Mahinda Rajapaksa to campaign for it.

If the Wigneswaran-led political alliance manages to improve upon the performance they put up at the local government elections, there is the possibility that by the time the next parliamentary elections come around in mid-2020, it may be the largest Tamil group in Parliament, representing the North and East. Before the next parliamentary election, the Wigneswarn-led group needs another election which they can fight under Wigneswaran’s leadership and make their mark. If the government does not give them the provincial council elections that they are obviously expecting, Wigneswaran may be compelled to put himself forward as a candidate at the Presidential elections to show that the people of the North and East are with him.

Hence, the government should think twice before depriving the Wigneswaran-led group of the opening it seeks because the only alternative that may be available to them may be to put Wigneswaran forward as a candidate at the Presidential election. The TNA will not object if the provincial, council elections are delayed because the only way they seem to be headed is down, and if by some chance the Northern provincial council elections are held and they slide back further, they will almost certainly lose the ascendency in Northern politics they have enjoyed since the demise of Prabhakaran in 2009, at the next Parliamentary election.

Even if the TNA goes around the North and east accusing Wigneswaran of splitting the Tamil vote at the Presidential election to enable the candidate of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna to win, it is unlikely that such propaganda will have much traction among the Tamil people of the North and East because the TNA obtained their votes by promising them all kinds of things in case of Maithripala Sirisena’s victory, but they have delivered next to nothing.

It is, in fact, this feeling that has resulted in the TNA vote dropping by one half in the Tamil heartlands of Jaffna and Batticaloa. The presidential election of Jan. 2015 showed that over the decades, the ITAK has not changed much. At the 1977 parliamentary elections, the then TULF contested on the promise to the Tamil people that if they voted for the TULF, today, they would have Tamil Eelam tomorrow. We all know how things turned out thereafter.

What the TNA is now facing once again is the nemesis of not being able to deliver on its promises and competitors are gaining ground. There is the likelihood that Wigneswaran may face the presidential election as the Tamil candidate on the argument that an overwhelming Tamil vote for a Tamil candiate from both the Northern and Eastern provinces will show the world how the Tamil people feel. If this does take place, it will be the first time since 1977, that a Tamil leader will be able to make this point. So, unless the newly emergent forces in the North are given the opportunity that they are obviously seeking to upstage the TNA at the provincial council elections, the former may end up upstaging the yahapalana candidate at the next presidential elections instead, by fielding a Tamil candidate.

So, what is it going to be?

Is the government going to hold the provincial council elections and throw the TNA to the wolves, or is it going to put off the PC elections and then get upstaged by a Tamil candidate at the presidential elections and thrown to the wolves itself?

MEDIA OWNERSHIP IN SRI LANKA: AUDIENCE CONCENTRATION IS VESTED IN THE HANDS OF A FEW OWNERS.


Sri Lanka Brief25/10/2018

23 individuals own 44 of the most popular media outlets in the country. The owners of 2 outlets in the online medium remains unknown. The top 4 owners in the mediums of print, television and radio are mostly privately-owned companies. Additionally, audience concentration in each medium is vested in the hands of a few owners.

State-owned media factors into the top 4 owners in the mediums of print and television. For the year 2017, the state was the only owner to have a foothold in all 4 mediums of print, television, radio and online. In addition to being an owner, the state also plays an exclusive role as a regulatory body in the media landscape.

Media outlets, especially in the print medium, are not free of political affiliations. Today, at least 6 companies are either directly owned by an individual holding political office or by persons related to individuals in political positions.

RSF/VR

For full report please visit 

Jamal Khashoggi’s Murder: Danger In Trading Democratic Rights For Economic Prosperity 



Rasika Jayakody
logoSocial media was flooded this week with the photograph of Salah Bin Jamal Khashoggi, son of the slain journalist Jamal Khashoggi, meeting with Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, de facto ruler of Saudi and the man considered responsible for the murder of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. 
The emotions of Salah, a captive in his own country, are chilling to contemplate. As a young man banned from leaving his own country, Salah had little choice over the finely choreographed meeting with the Saudi ruler: sea of emotions was understandably suppressed on his blank face.
The brutal murder of Khashoggi has unmasked Prince Salman, who has attempted to create a public image as a ruler open to democratic reforms in a state that has little regard for human rights and free speech. He was the blue-eyed boy of US President Donald Trump and was considered the lynchpin of the US foreign policy in the Middle East. The 33-year-old ruler also launched a major investment drive to attract movers and shakers in the global business sphere to his oil-rich country. A few months before Khashoggi’s murder, MBS seemed to be a man destined for greatness. It took seven minutes – the time it took for the Saudi hit squad to kill Khashoggi and dismember his body – to reverse the Prince’s fortune and put him in the centre of an inescapable political and diplomatic crisis.
The photograph of the Saudi Prince’s meeting with Khashoggi’s son eerily reminded many Sri Lankans of a widely published photograph taken in 2013 by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s official photographer. It was the photograph of the meeting between former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the family members of the victims killed by the Army at a protest in Rathupaswala. Although there is no evidence to say that Rajapaksa personally overlooked the ‘military operation’ in Rathupaswala that resulted in the killings of victims who demanded nothing but clean water, it strains credulity to believe that the former President was not aware of the deployment of the Army to disperse a civilian protest.
The aggrieved family members of the Rathupaswala incident too were made to pose for photographs with their President, knowing that those who ordered the military operation that resulted in the deaths of their loved ones would escape the arm of the law. They knew they were being used as pawns of a well-crafted PR operation aimed squarely at distancing Rajapaksa from the bloodbath that shocked the nation. And they also knew the consequences, had they collectively boycotted the photo-op with the President, would have been unthinkable.
Their plight was no different to that of Jamal Khashoggi’s son who is in no position to openly demand justice for his father. 
What is interesting, is that Khashoggi’s murder occurred at a time when many Sri Lankans are considering bringing back a strong, MBS-style administration to drive economic development in Sri Lanka and bail the country out of the current morass – considerations triggered by the incompetence of the current government.On the political front, the government has miserably fallen short of delivering the promised reforms and their main election pledge – the abolition of the Executive Presidency – has vanished into the thin air. The government’s failure to make tough decisions and operate within a strong policy framework has destabilized the economy, and it is against this backdrop that many – including a sizable proportion of the educated urban middle class – have begun to entertain the notion of a “benevolent dictator” – and who better to suit the profile than former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa. 
The murder of Khashoggi and the Saudi Prince’s apparent involvement in the well-planned operation make a strong case for why the word “benevolence” cannot be juxtaposed with the word “dictator”. Dictators are never benevolent and they can never be. While sometimes dictators wear gilded cloaks of “progressiveness” and “modernisation”, it is only to conceal the repression lying at the core of their systems of governance. 

Read More

The High Commission of Sri Lanka hosts Investment Forum in London to attract Foreign Direct Investment into the Western Region Megapolis Master Plan


LEN logo(Lanka e News - 23.Oct.2018, 5.00AM) The High Commission of Sri Lanka in the United Kingdom along with the British High Commission in Colombo facilitated an investment promotion event under the auspices of the Minister of Megapolis and Western Development Patali Champika Ranawaka on 18 October 2018 at the High Commission premises. The morning session was graced by Ranil Jayawardene MP, British Prime Minister’s Trade Envoy for Sri Lanka. Officials of the Ministry of Megapolis and Western Development, British High Commission in Colombo, UK Department for International Trade, CHEC Port City Colombo (Pvt) Limited, UK Export Finance and investors participated in the session. The evening session was attended by members of the Sri Lankan community living in the United Kingdom.
British investors and the Sri Lankan diaspora were briefed on potential investment opportunities and on progress made by the Government of Sri Lanka with regard to the Port City and other key development initiatives undertaken in Sri Lanka, especially the Western Region Megapolis Master Plan.  
Minister of Megapolis and Western Development Patali Champika Ranawaka informed the audience that Sri Lanka was at a crucial juncture in terms of economic transformation and briefed the audience on the investment opportunities in the country, especially the Western Province of Sri Lanka. The Minister remarked that Sri Lanka was no longer capable of relying solely on the increased deployment of factors of production or productivity improvements as modes of stimulating economic growth and that Sri Lanka’s future growth will be based on the transformation of its economy into a knowledge-based economy. He also remarked on the strategic importance of Sri Lanka’s geographical location lying between major shipping and aviation routes, while stating that the Government of Sri Lanka will look to enhance and improve its sea and air ports. He elaborated on the Western Region Megapolis Master Plan and the National Physical Plan.
Ranil Jayawardena MP, British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Trade Envoy for Sri Lanka, stated that he has visited Sri Lanka frequently in 2018 with the intention of strengthening trade ties with the country. He reiterated the support of the British Government toward Sri Lanka and stated that he would like to see deeper relations between Sri Lankan and British businesses. The MP remarked on Sri Lanka’s skilled workforce and why it would be attractive for British businesses to invest in Sri Lanka, while welcoming moves by the Government of Sri Lanka to implement English Law in the Port City.     
The Acting High Commissioner Sugeeshwara Gunaratna in his welcome speech, stated that the Government of Sri Lanka has undertaken an expansive development programme to turn the Western Province of Sri Lanka into a megapolis with among others, a dedicated tech hub, logistics hub, a port city, a financial city, multi-modal transportation linkages and smart solutions for energy and garbage disposal. He stated that the UK investors, with their long-standing history of business relations with Sri Lanka, were in an ideal position to exploit the opportunities and urged those in attendance to utilise this forum to engage with the Ministry of Megapolis and Western Development in order to create mutually beneficial linkages.
Presentations were also made on the Colombo Port City and the Megapolis and the Western Development Master Plan. The UK Export Finance representative briefed the audience on financing arrangements available for UK entrepreneurs and investors who wish to invest in Sri Lanka.
The morning session was followed by a networking lunch and business meetings with the Minister of Megapolis and Western Development.
---------------------------
by     (2018-10-22 23:49:35)

Army decided to recall Lt. Col. Kalana Amunupure from Mali



2018-10-25

Sri Lanka Army today said it has decided to recall Commander of its 200-strong contingent assigned to the UN peacekeeping force in Mali, Lieutenant Colonel Kalana Amunupura in response to the request made by the United Nations.

Earlier, the UN asked the Sri Lankan Government to repatriate Lieutenant Colonel Amunupura owing to alleged involvement in war crimes.

“It is pertinent to place on record that  appointment of Lt. Col. Amunupure was agreed by the UN itself after the Sri Lanka Army forwarded the names of four nominees in the year 2016 before the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (SLHRC) was entrusted the task of vetting service personnel, bound for UN assignments in December 2017 as advised by the UN,” the Army said in a statement.

The Army said that at that stage the UN had cleared Lieutenant Colonel  Amunupura for the appointment of the Commander of Combat Convoy Company in Mali (MINUSMA) dropping all three other nominees.

Meanwhile, the Army  confirmed that there was no any involvement of Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (SLHRC) in recalling Lieutenant Colonel Kalana Amunupura in question.

Unhappy is the land that needs a hero


logo Thursday, 25 October 2018 

“Unhappy is the land that needs a hero” is the heavy-hearted response of Galileo to his pupil Andrea when the latter furious with the astronomer’s recantation tells him, “Unhappy is the land that breeds no hero”.

Bertolt Brecht wrote his epic play on the life of Galileo in the twilight years of the Weimar republic when its democratic chaos was nearing its end. Electoral success of the Nazis had made Hitler the Chancellor of Germany. He introduced this specific exchange on heroism and reason in the English version done in 1944. That was after the Americans devastated two Japanese cities with nuclear bombs to win a “peace”.

They were troubling times when reason was replaced with cold-eyed, cold-hearted manipulative power grabs. We may now be approaching such uncertain times.

In addition to his play, Bertolt Brecht wrote a marvellous tract on how to locate and defend truth. He outlined five difficulties in combating lies and ignorance.

The truth is opposed everywhere. The seeker of truth must have the courage to write the truth. He must have the keenness to recognise it because everywhere it is concealed. The truth seeker must have the skill to manipulate it as a weapon. He must have the judgment to select those in whose hands it will be effective, and the cunning to spread the truth.

This essay is inspired by such a desire to locate, defend and spread the truth. We live at a time when the obvious truth is trampled by power and lust for naked power.

With the passage of the 18th Amendment Mahinda Rajapaksa became the supreme overlord of the island that he rescued in the civil war. His Executive Presidency was not subject to term limits. He could pick and unpick officials in all branches of government. He allowed much mischief in governance.

Yet, he retained a semblance of accountability. He did not control the total State. The national security apparatus reported to someone else. That someone else owned the fear mechanism of the State. That was the fountain head of impunity.

What is unravelling in the house of ‘Saud’ now has a lesson for us. When the national security apparatus becomes the exclusive preserve of a power behind or proximate to the legitimate seat of power, it becomes a “hyper political “tool to suppress dissent and a “spooky political” tool to intimidate those who dare to dissent.
Gotabaya for president?
During the past week, presidential aspirant Gotabaya Rajapaksa earned a series of spunky, peppery headlines provoked by Bandula Gunewardene, our own apparition of Adam Smith.

The grand master of profoundly-learned economic gibberish declared Gotabaya to be the most suitable brother for the job of president.

Irrepressibly plain-spoken stalwart of the Joint Opposition Kumar Welgama disagreed. The presidential candidate must be someone with impeccable democratic credentials, said he. His dissent unleashed a contentious cacophony among Gotabaya loyalists.

At a Joint Opposition meeting in Kandy presided over by the former President, three Central Province Parliamentarians were in hot competition, condemning Kumar Welgama for his non-endorsement of Gotabaya for President.

Kumar Welgama made no reference to Gotabaya. All he said was that the candidate’s copybook should be free of any antidemocratic blots! It has a lesson.

Gotabaya does not promise democratic governance. He offers decisive governance. It is not the presidency that he wants. He wants the total State. He has nursed a constituency that expects him to protect and preserve a racialised sovereignty.

That explains the vehement opposition of his support base to any kind of constitutional reforms that either removes or replaces the executive presidency.

If the 20th Amendment gets past the hurdle of a two-thirds majority, the outcome of the referendum is assured. That remains a huge if. In politics, if is as boundless as the stars. So, it is time for us to consider the real possibility of Gotabaya Rajapaksa running for president and winning it.

We may disagree with his ‘weltanschauung’. The German term is often loosely translated as the vision of the world. It is much more. It is a comprehensive assessment of the world and the place of humanity within it. Our perceptions are conditioned more by language and culture and less by acquired knowledge and experience. Weltanschauung is the way one looks at the state, politics, economic activity, morality and so on.

To the great consternation of many of his peers, the great German thinker Martin Heidegger under Adolf Hitler embarked on a project to transform university education in Germany into an ideological force imbued with a Germanic spirit. Mind you, this happened in Germany that produced Immanuel Kant, Karl Marx and Schopenhauer.

After the war, Heidegger appeared before a denazification committee. The Committee, after lengthy deliberations, allowed him to remain as an emeritus Professor but was banned from teaching at the university.

Warped fascist minds do take shape in places of higher learning when intellects are corrupted with dreams of greatness and grandeur – the inevitable result of a knowledge deficit.

Recently Professor of Pharmacology Channa Jayasumana of the Rajarata University addressed the UNHRC in Geneva and gave his version of the history of Tamils in Sri Lanka. He is an eminent academic and intellectual of the Gotabaya’s formula one team.

Corrosive influence of imagined national revival permeating academic institutions has happened before. Martin Heidegger, the rector of the Freiburg University under Hitler, did it with a cruel honesty of conviction.

In a lecture on technology the great philosopher shed all vestiges of humanity. “Agriculture is now a motorised food-industry – in essence the same as the manufacture of corpses in gas chambers and extermination camps...”

Under Hitler, universities were made exclusive preserves of the German spirit. Martin Heidegger wrote to the Ministry of Education: “We now face a real choice whether we should again provide for our German spiritual life (unserem deutschen Geistesleben) talents and educators rooted in our soil, or whether we should surrender it once and for all to an ever-growing ‘Jewishness’ (Verjudung) in both a broad and narrow sense.”

History has instructed the people of Germany. Their federal constitution has deliberately dispensed with a directly-elected president.

These historical precedents instruct us to face challenges of intellectual zealotry presented by ‘Viyathmaga’ academics.
Gotabaya’s peculiar ‘weltanschauung’
As I said before, the political project of Gotabaya Rajapaksa is shaped by his peculiar ‘weltanschauung’. It offers an ecstatically persuasive proposition to the anti-elitist Sinhala speaking lower middle class. It has a cogent appeal to the Sinhala-speaking professionals and business class. It is propelled by a committed corporate oligarchy yearning for a decisive centralised authority of the total state. It must also be remembered that the entrepreneurial class weary of the current buffoonery are not too displeased to see a change.

Only muddled minds that dream of riding Volkswagens assembled in Kurunegala would seriously contest this simple prognosis.

The former Defence Secretary is a serious candidate. He is a credible candidate because he is perceived as a strong leader. In times of chaos and crisis, strong leaders are in demand by the poor, the rich and the elite.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s most recent speech at the ‘Eliya’ gathering at Godagama where Bandula Gunewardene made his unconditional endorsement is available on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXccAXIghQ8).

He explains that ‘Viyathmaga’ is the forum for academics and professionals to identify issues and formulates strategies for national development and economic progress. ‘Eliya’ was the broader movement constructing a mass national consciousness.

We must listen to his speech. He explains that his ‘Eliya’ sheds light. The problem is that it is a blinding light of the surveillance state. It is nationalistic in spirit. It is economic in promise. It is militaristic in content. Naturally, the serious pursuit of identified goals along a planned path requires a higher dose of discipline and a lesser dose of democracy. Dissent would be unpatriotic. Contrary opinion would be a threat to national security.
Gotabaya is a

different proposition

Gotabaya Rajapaksa is a rare managerial genius. He has assiduously developed a tight hold on émigré Sinhala communities in their countries of residence through Sri Lankan temples.

He commands loyalty. Leadership is the ability to gain the trust of followers. The ‘Viyathmaga’ is committed to advance his persona. That is the shared vision of the two outfits labelled ‘Viyathmaga’ and ‘Eliya.’

As the leader he has moulded both outfits to serve the singular objective – to make him the next president.

His brother Mahinda too has followers. Mahinda’s followers are the rent seekers and political parvenus who see him as a means of accessing power. To them MR offers a solid return on investment.

Gotabaya is a different proposition. He has followers who believe that he deserves to be in power. Where Mahinda demands loyalty, Gotabaya demands allegiance.

In his speech at Godagama, Gotabaya Rajapaksa does what demagogues do best. He painstakingly attacks the moral worth of those now in power. He comes out well because he sounds true. Challenging the moral worth of the present lot does not demand too much effort. He sounds correct because he is sincerely indignant.

He explains that the Akuregoda defence complex was a great patriotic undertaking. He rattles out figures in billions that the listener can hardly keep track of.

He makes militarism a mandatory, existential imperative. Gotabaya makes no attempt to disguise his firm resolve to make the military play a central role in our peace time society. He is either convinced or plainly assumes that the nation is facing an imminent and an enormous threat.

He gives an eagle eye view of his transformation of Colombo’s cityscape that earned him the plaudits of middle-class matrons who can now jettison their excess fat on paved walkways. He explains the logic of relocating shanty dwellers in high-rise apartments as a means of releasing prime commercial property for more profitable investments.

He did not explain that the inner city is a torture chamber where hundreds of thousands compete for the most basic elements of life such as a room within reach of employment, affordable rent, access to schools, clean drinking water and perhaps a small corner of a street for a cobbler to practice his craft.

Gamini Lokuge initiated into working class trade union politics by the great, lamented Cyril Mathew, the Sinhala hero, was in the audience.

Re-modellers of urban space intuitively believe that poverty in the slum can be upgraded to lower middle class in the high-rise. It does not work that way. Countless injustices occur when redevelopment uproots families from squalor by the canal to grime in the sky.

The working man’s champion Lokuge did not deem it necessary to ask the prophet such silly details. Undoubtedly Lokuge is an imposing intellectual and a resolutely academic standard bearer of both “Viyathmaga” and “Eliya”. The sagacious urbanisation czar was spared the pain of explaining that side of urban development.

Lokuge was also co-opted to confirm that it was President JRJ who had earmarked the Akuregoda land for the defence complex. It would have been patriotic blasphemy to query if JRJ would have approved spending on the defence complex nearly the same cost of the Southern Highway from Colombo to Galle!

In Gotabaya’s ‘weltanschauung’ ‘nationalism’ and ‘patriotism’ are interchangeable. He makes a determined attempt to construct a perception of national superiority and an implied sense of national dominance. He does it with poise and polish.

In fairness it must be said that Gotabaya recognises the necessity of the nation state to be linked to the global economy. He defines the terms of dealing with the outside world according to his sense of self. He is totally at peace with his narcistic ‘weltanschauung’ that has its exclusive inventory of traditions and values.

Gotabaya’s ‘nationalism’ is a cultural doctrine for and of the Sinhala Buddhists. The identity and the autonomy of the nation is intrinsically linked to that fundamental premise which he defines as patriotism.

His character as displayed in his speech is near Hegelian. To him becoming is more important than being. He seeks timeless perfection within a timeframe. That may well turn out to be evil.
Gotabaya may well be

our next president

Gotabaya Rajapaksa may well be our next executive president. If he makes it, he will not repeal the 19th Amendment. He will retain the independent commissions. He will appoint the commissioners. The RTI Commission will decide what information should be withheld in the national interest. The Human Rights Commission will independently rule on any transgressions. Those appointed will be classic Pavlovian as those trekking on the ‘viyathmaga’ lit up by the ‘eliya’.

The Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov perfected the system of rewarding behaviour that anticipated command. He said it for all time: “It is not accidental that all phenomena of human life are dominated by the search for daily bread – the oldest link connecting all living things, man included, with the surrounding nature.”

I am in my seventies. I leave some received wisdom of the past seven decades as penned by Alexander Solzhenitsyn in ‘Gulag Archipelago’.

“….. line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?

….. One and the same human being is, at various ages, under various circumstances, a totally different human being. At times he is close to being a devil, at times to sainthood. But his name doesn’t change, and to that name we ascribe the whole lot, good and evil. Socrates taught us: ‘Know thyself!”

Yet, some good people of our land demand the firm hand of a strong leader. Bertolt Brecht likened them to people who wish to enjoy veal without slaughtering the calf.