Colombo brings in more Sinhala colonists to Trincomalee
2,000 Sinhala families from the South are being brought into Trincomalee district by the occupying Sri Lanka's Government Agent in the district, Major General T.T.R. de Silva, who is a former commander of the Sri Lanka Army in Trincomalee, informed civil sources in the city told TamilNet Friday adding that Colombo is in the process of completing a demograhic genocide on Eezham Tamils in the district while the global powers locked in a geopolitcal race provide necessary time and space to the Colombo Establishment.
The Sinhala families, being brought in from South, are to be settled at Jeyanthipuram along the Serunuwara Road, within a 5 km radius from a military camp.
The Sinhala settlers are being brought from Hambanthotta, Negombo, Chilaw and Moratuwa areas.
The sources in Trincomalee say that the Sri Lankan government is conspiring to totally eradicate the Tamil representation in the district by the next general elections.
At the general elections held in the year 2010, the Tamil representation was pushed downwards to the lowest position.
SLMC to veto scrapping 13A
By Sanjaya Dassanayake-2013-06-08
Meanwhile, the draft document of the proposed amendments was presented to the Cabinet on Thursday and the SLMC Leader had informed the Cabinet that he would announce the decision of his party at the next Cabinet meeting after consulting the SLMC High Command. Later in the evening, the SLMC High Command decided to vote against the proposed amendments, the spokesman said.
SLMC Leader and Justice Minister, Rauff Hakeem also confirmed in an interview with BBC that the SLMC would vote against amendments the government is planning to introduce to the existing 13th Amendment to the Constitution.
He also said his party's decision, whether to remain as a constituent party of the government, will largely depend on how the government will act from now onwards in relation to the 13th Amendment and added it will be difficult for the SLMC to remain in the government. Hakeem told BBC that it was due to the insistence of Vasudeva Nanayakkara and himself that President Mahinda Rajapaksa decided to give the UPFA constituent parties a week to submit their proposals to amend the 13th Amendment.However, Ministers Prof. G.L. Peiris, Champika Ranawaka and Wimal Weerawansa, had strongly opposed this, claiming the amendments had to be implemented soon.
He also said his party's decision, whether to remain as a constituent party of the government, will largely depend on how the government will act from now onwards in relation to the 13th Amendment and added it will be difficult for the SLMC to remain in the government. Hakeem told BBC that it was due to the insistence of Vasudeva Nanayakkara and himself that President Mahinda Rajapaksa decided to give the UPFA constituent parties a week to submit their proposals to amend the 13th Amendment.However, Ministers Prof. G.L. Peiris, Champika Ranawaka and Wimal Weerawansa, had strongly opposed this, claiming the amendments had to be implemented soon.
Reliable sources said, President Mahinda Rajapaksa had inquired whether there was meaning to Hakeem being in the Cabinet as the SLMC representative, if he is not capable of making bold decisions expeditiously.