Peace for the World

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

Friday, May 27, 2011

Sri Lanka PM will protect military on UN rights action


CBC news   The Associated Press Posted: May 27, 2011 1:45 AM ET
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa says his armed forces followed international human rights law during their fight with separatist Tamil Tiger rebels. (Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters )
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa says his armed forces followed international human rights law during their fight with separatist Tamil Tiger rebels.
  

Thursday, May 26, 2011

More on Sri Lanka

http://www.tvo.org/utils_tvo/images/tvo_small_logo.gifPosted on: 24 May 2011 by Daniel Kitts
I had a bit of extra content left over from the program I produced called "Sri Lanka: Finding A Middle Ground." So I thought it made sense to include it in a follow-up blog post.



Full Story>>>

A robust debate on No Fire Zones (NFZs) and International Humanitarian Law: Artful dodging of war crimes in Sri Lanka?

http://a0.twimg.com/profile_images/877084884/Groundviews_bigger.jpg *groundviews journalism For citizens


Original image courtesy PEDRO UGARTE/AFP/Getty Images

A central challenge of curating content on Groundviews is that some of the most interesting discussions which occur on comment threads get obscured over time, and are less visible than the primary material published here. A case in point is the recent thrust and parry of wit over the establishment of the No Fire Zones towards the end of war in Sri Lanka. The debate was between two leading voices on this site and the Sri Lankan new media landscape, Aachcharya and David Blacker, in response to a review of The Cage, the explosive new book on the end of war by former UN spokesperson Gordon Weiss.     Continue reading »

Disaster that befell Hoole who heeded President’s call for

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7-1By Namini Wijedasa
On a personal assurance from President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Prof. Ratnajeevan Hoole, a former vice chancellor of the University of Jaffna, returned to Sri Lanka with his family to serve the country he so loved. His experience since coming back has been “horrible” and has left him sorely disappointed.
I think President Rajapaksa meant well by me and intended to keep his promise. But as president he cannot afford to allow his directive on our appointments to be ignored nor can he simply ignore a promise he made just because of
Douglas Devananda’s objections.
Devananda is running Jaffna exactly the way the Tigers ran Jaffna. The UGC has obligingly appointed 13 of Douglas’ nominees to the University’s Council of 25. He holds monthly “pre-Council meetings” before the real Council where university decisions are taken, including whom to vote in as VC.
A contractor appointed to the Council does university hostels for some Rs. 300 million against the law. Devananda’s minions get into many university jobs which are never advertised and cannot be disciplined once hired. People fear to complain after General Mahinda Hathurusinghe said that EPDP cadres are responsible for the recent robberies and murders.
Controlling the VC is important to him as you can see from the ongoing student union election playing out: a compliant VC with a three-year Indian degree and Jaffna PhD, obligated to Douglas for her appointment, took an old complaint against a TNA-leaning student about to be elected president and within a few hours found him guilty and declared the university out of bounds for him. Devananda saw me as independent. So he raised anti-Christian phobia telling the president that Hindus will be angered if I am appointed. I was then asked to get statements from prominent Hindus in support of me. Most Hindus wanted me and what he told the president is insulting to them.
Obviously the president lacks independent sources of information in Jaffna. To connect to the Tamils the president must dump Devananda and talk to real leaders who can be identified only by holding elections.
Disaster that befell Hoole who heeded President’s call for diaspora to come back Full Story>>>

As Sri Lanka General Silva At UN Peacekeeping Signing, War Crimes Questions


Inner City Press
By Matthew Russell Lee UNITED NATIONS, May 25 — With UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon yet to even transmit his Panel of Experts report on war crimes in Sri Lanka to the UN in Geneva, a General who features prominently in the report, Shavendra Silva, met this week with Ban’s Department of Peacekeeping Operations. Inner City Press asked Ban’s spokesman Martin Nesirky about Shavendra Silva’s appearance in the report, and at the agreement signing with UN DPKO. Nesirky replied that “the primary responsibility of ensuring that nations meet the highest standards of integrity lies with member states… we insist with member states that they should contribute personnel who have not committed human rights violations.” Since it is rare, particularly in Sri Lanka, for government to admit its personnel have committed any rights violations, this seems like a weak policy.
Silva, Wimal & Kohona at UN this month, DPKO signing not shown (c) MRLee  Nesirky went on to say that the UN does its own screening of “uniformed personnel… senior staff and experts.” Inner City Press asked if the UN does any screening of those with whom it signs agreements related to its peacekeeping. That is, did the UN screen Silva? Nesirky said it was an agreement with a country, not an individual. We’ll see. ——————————————————————————————————- 

Lawyers for Democracy Urges Independent Verification of Facts contained in UN Report on Sri Lanka; Asks for Professional Responses http://www.lankaenews.com/English/images/logo.jpg (Lanka-e-News -25.May.2011, 11.40AM) The war in the North and East has come to an end. Due to the blanket censorship on conflict related news, local and international media did not have the freedom to cover the conflict. Consequently,the public only received one sided information and in general, the public was kept in the dark. In the absence of independent access for journalists, the sources of information were the military and the LTTE, both of whom were obviously biased.    Full story  »

[Viewpoint] Korea should shun Sri Lanka

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Instead of attending the Sri Lankan army’s conference, Korea should support the call for an international investigation into war crimes.
May 27, 2011
In the final months of the decades-long war in Sri Lanka in 2009, tens of thousands of civilians were killed as government forces closed in on the Tamil Tigers. The government’s strategy included repeated shelling of civilians, targeting hospitals and the total exclusion of independent monitors, including international aid agencies and foreign journalists.
Next week, the Sri Lankan army will hold a conference in Colombo to tout its view of counterinsurgency operations and encourage others to copy its methods. Many countries with professional armies have declined the invitation.
Inexplicably, Korea is expected to attend.   Full Story>>>
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IanKiru Karan
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Sri Lankan Born ‘Container King’ Ian Kiru Karan Becomes German Minister
From rags to riches: BILD.de documents the progress of Hamburg’s flagship entrepreneur, Ian Karan Kiru’s career, as he becomes Hamburg’s Economic Senator.
Ian Kiru Karan who was born in Point Pedro in 1939, moved to Germany in 1970 after studying in the United Kingdom — where he went on to build one of the world’s biggest container leasing companies in Hamburg.
He was recently sworn in as Senator for Economic Affairs in Hamburg.
As an orphan from Sri Lanka, Ian Kiru Karan obtained a scholarship to study at the London School of Economics and later worked for the English branch of the logistics company, Schenker.  Later, Karan moved to Hamburg in 1970, with no more than 3,000 DM with him.    Full Story

Under war crimes pressure, Sri Lanka to begin new rights probe

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COLOMBO | Thu May 26, 2011 7:57pm IST
(Reuters) - Sri Lanka said on Thursday its dormant human rights commission would begin hearing new complaints, as the Indian Ocean nation remains under mounting Western pressure to investigate war crimes allegations made by a U.N.-appointed panel.
The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, which has no judicial powers beyond recommending government authorities take action, said it will begin a probe of serious rights violations nationwide, including those from the war.
"We propose to appoint a panel of retired judges to look into all the pending important cases," commission chairman Priyantha Perera told Reuters. "We want this panel of judges to look into more serious violations in every part of the country."
Western governments led by the United States have pushed Sri Lanka to establish a believable probe into the panel's finding of "credible evidence" government troops killed thousands of civilians at the end of the country's civil war in 2009.
Sri Lanka says the accusations parrot propaganda from supporters of the defeated Tamil Tiger separatists, and dismisses the panel's findings as groundless and biased. It denies troops targeted civilians.
The government said reactivation of the commission and appointment of the panel was not done to appease anyone.
"There was no special reason to reactivate now. Since the war is over, there was a need to activate," acting cabinet spokesman and deputy minister of economic development Lakshman Yapa Awbeywardene told reporters.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa's government has said the separate Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) is already implementing reconciliation moves shaped by testimony taken from those affected by the war.
Critics say the LLRC lacks independence, and is likely to go the way of four decades' worth of Sri Lankan probes into rights abuses since the first of three violent insurgencies began in 1971, and find nothing and hold no one responsible.
Washington has warned that failure to credibly investigate the allegations and establish genuine reconciliation could lead to an international war crimes probe.
Most diplomats involved with Sri Lanka see that as a remote possibility, given Chinese and Russian backing for Sri Lanka on the U.N. Security Council. The U.N. Human Rights council, meeting next week, may take up the matter.
Sri Lanka will hold a military parade and memorial for fallen soldiers on Friday to mark the second anniversary of the defeat of the Tamil Tigers, which ended a quarter-century civil war.
(Writing by Bryson Hull; Editing by Sugita Katyal)
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"Scrap emergency and PTA " - Friday Forum

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sinhala/images/furniture/banner.gif"Scrap emergency and PTA " - Friday Forum
Thousands of Tamil people were displaced over the final months of fighting
Thousands of Tamil people were displaced over the final months of fighting
In a sentiment rarely expressed within Sri Lanka, a group of prominent intellectuals has urged the government to set up a body to look into issues of accountability on possible violations of international humanitarian law.
The Friday Forum, a multi-ethnic group which is led by a Sri Lankan former under-secretary-general of the UN, also calls for sweeping changes in post-war Sri Lanka.                  Full Story

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The continuing disinformation campaigns in Sri Lanka: Is mainstream media complicit?

http://a0.twimg.com/profile_images/877084884/Groundviews_bigger.jpg *groundviews journalism For citizens 

25 May, 2011 Groundviews  For the second time in a fortnight, subscribers to the Daily Mirror newspaper have been entreated to an interesting disinformation campaign that appears to be conducted with those embedded within, and possibly with the full support of the Sri Lankan Army and its network of patriots.
The full page ad above was published on the Daily Mirror on 23rd May. A high resolution scan can be downloaded here. At the bottom, the advertisement is attributed to the ‘Free Mass Media Movement’. No such movement exists, or has existed. With the clear intention to obfuscate rather than enlighten, the name is a spin off from the Free Media Movement, which for a variety of reasons, is well known to government and also amongst media freedom activists. Continue reading »  
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SRI LANKA: Myths and Realities: Reflections on the Report of the UN Advisory Panel and Colombo’s Response

http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/images/Title2.jpg25-May-2011

V. Suryanarayan and Ashik Bonofer 

Sri Lanka had been at war with itself for several years and sections of international community are getting sensitized to the horrendous crimes which took place in the island during the last stages of the Fourth Eelam War. The Report of the UN Secretary General’s panel of experts on accountability in Sri Lanka - not an investigative panel, but only an advisory group – has triggered off an intense debate within the island as well as the wider world. Unfortunately in India, especially in Tamil Nadu, the publication of the report has not resulted in a healthy debate. This essay is intended to provoke a lively discussion. It also makes a plea that India should revise its stance on the human rights issue. As and when the report comes up for discussion in the United Nations, India, unlike previous occasions, should not bail out Sri Lanka.   Full Story>>>
RI LANKA: Myths and Realities: Reflections on the Report of the UN Advisory Panel and Colombo's Response

People in cloth sheds, Buddhist stupas built in Vanni

A resettled family in VanniThe hut of a ‘resttled’ family


TamilNet{TamilNet, Wednesday, 25 May 2011, 06:12 GMT]
Genocidal Sri Lanka’s ‘reconciliation’ in Vanni, abetted by its international partners is building huge Buddhist stupas there, while keeping Eezham Tamil natives in cloth tents. If building Buddhist establishments and new Sinhala-military townships in Vanni is the job of the state and re-building houses for the war-ravaged people and providing them with ‘milk and bread’ are the jobs of others and the diaspora, what is wrong in Eezham Tamils and their diaspora demanding the world for their country to be handed over to them for the true development of its people and to ensure ‘milk and bread’ really reach them, asks a Tamil politician in Jaffna, particularly addressing India and two other South Asian countries Pakistan and Bangladesh that will be attending a Chinese sponsored coaching programme of Colombo by the end of this month on how to conduct genocide with international abetment.
Colombo’s concentration presently is on completely Sinhalicising Vanni.
The mushrooming Buddhist stupas built at a huge cost in Vanni are the epicentres of the programme.
At Kanakaraayan-ku’lam in Vavuniyaa district an extensive Buddhist complex is being built currently, adjacent to the A9 Highway. Colombo has confiscated some private lands for this purpose.
The Buddhist stupa currently built at Kanakaraayan-ku’lam with the backing of the occupying Army is going to be massive, reaching to a height of 500 feet.
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State terrorism in Sri Lanka says UNP

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The main opposition accused the government of promoting state terrorism. United National Party (UNP), say the compulsory leadership training for new undergraduates is a step in that direction.
Higher education minister with the president
Compulsory training was initiated by the ministry of higher education

Speaking to media on Wednesday, MP Lashman Kiriella said, “This training is the initial step towards preparing candidates for state terrorism”.
Unsuitable for female students
Criticising the residential training camps held inside security establishments, the MP say that it is also a burden on poor families. “People can’t afford to buy the set of clothes required for the training. It costs over ten thousand rupees”.
He also says the training environment inside security forces and police camps, is not suitable for the security of female students.
Indian influence
The opposition also blamed the government of not taking part in a fruitful discussion with the other political parties while engaging with foreign powers.
“India seems to be dictating how things are done here. For months since the end of the war, we had been asking the government to lift the emergency. Now India had told them to do so”. Said the opposition spokesman.
He also blamed the ruling party for the massive loss of lives due to prolonged civil war.
Thousands died
“When we suggested the thirteenth amendment, they opposed it. A consensus at the time would have prevented the war, loss of thousands of lives and developing hatred”.
“Now they have agreed with India to go beyond the thirteenth amendment. Why is it only agreeable when India suggests it?” the UNP questioned.All nearby lands in the locality have also been confiscated by the genocidal state and local people are prohibited from entering the whole locality.  Full story >>

Sri Lanka: Confronting the Killing Fields

http://livewire.amnesty.org/wp-content/themes/blog/images/headers/header-900x100.jpg25 May 2011

Sri Lanka: Confronting the Killing Fields


By Steve Crawshaw international advocacy director of Amnesty International
A hard-hitting UN report has found compelling evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the final phase of the war in Sri Lanka in spring 2009.
In the face of repeated government denials, the report’s authors reckon that up to 40,000 died in just a few terrible months in spring 2009 — kept out of the sight of television cameras, and out of the politicians’ minds. The report calls for an international investigation, which could have far-reaching consequences.


The UN says that both sides committed war crimes and crimes against humanity during the final phase of the war in Sri Lanka © Private
 Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka: Confronting the Killing Fields’
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Sri Lanka: Confronting the killing fields

Steve Crawshaw, London | Tue, 05/24/2011 7:00 AM
A hard-hitting UN report has found compelling evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the final phase of the war in Sri Lanka in spring 2009.

In the face of repeated government denials, the report’s authors reckon that up to 40,000 died in just a few terrible months in spring 2009 — kept out of the sight of television cameras, and out of the politicians’ minds. The report calls for an international investigation, which could have far-reaching consequences. Full Story>>>

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Prabhakaran’s Liberation Struggle

Ilankai Tamil Sangam

A Debate- compiled by Sachi Sri Kantha, May 21, 2011

http://www.sangam.org/2011/05/images/DayanJayatillekabookcover.jpgSidney Poitier also wrote: “all I can say is that there’s a place for people who are angry and defiant, and sometimes they serve a purpose, but that’s never been my role. And I have to say, too, that I have great respect for the kinds of people who are able to recycle their anger and put it to different uses.
On the other hand, even Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, who certainly didn’t appear angry when they burst upon the world, would never have burst upon the world in the first place if they hadn’t, at one time in their lives, gone through much, much anger and much, much resentment and much, much anguish.” (p. 124)
Though Prabhakaran’s critics may disagree with me, I’d infer that his anger against the discrimination faced by the Tamils, had a beneficial role.
                                      Full Story>>>
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War, peace and the Darusman report


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The UN report came as a shock to the ruling family because it is unused to criticism and adept at averting unfavourable outcomes with the clever use of lies and half truths, blanket denials and false promises.
by Tisaranee Gunasekara 
“Why were such perverse times ours?”
Giaccomo Leopardi (On the proposed Dante monument in Florence II) 

(May 24, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) In Sri Lanka, misfortune seems to dog those who incur the wrath of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his family. Journalists or media outlets critical of the regime have been particularly ill-fated: Lasantha Wickrematunge was killed; Keith Noyahr escaped by a hair’s breadth; J.S. Tissanayagam was incarcerated; Prageeth Ekneligoda disappeared; Sirasa/MTV was repeatedly attacked - just a few notable examples located outside the war zones.    Read More

Monday, May 23, 2011

Sri Lanka: Military Conference to Whitewash War Crimes

Human Rights Watch May 23, 2011
(New York) - Governments should decline the invitation to attend a Sri Lankan military conference that seeks to legitimize the unlawful killing of thousands of civilians during the armed conflict with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), Human Rights Watch said today. 
The Sri Lankan government has invited 54 countries to its "Seminar on Defeating Terrorism: The Sri Lankan Experience" from May 31 to June 2, 2011 in Colombo, the capital. The conference website says Sri Lankan military officials and panelists will "share their knowledge on Counter Insurgency and enumerate contributory factors in militarily defeating the LTTE." Sri Lanka: Military Conference to Whitewash War Crimes   Full Story...
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Monday, May 23, 2011

Will Sri Lanka's Tamils Get Some Measure of Justice from the United Nations?

Home

This Can't Be Happening


Forty-seven governments on the Untied Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) will discuss and decide, beginning at its May 30th session, what to do about an unusually candid and truthful report in the world of international politics.
The Report of the Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka was delivered to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on March 31 concerning both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in the last phases of the 26-year old civil war that ended May 19, 2009, and the consequences for approximately 300,000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) and, by extension, for the 2.7 million Sri Lankan Tamils, who were the losers in the war. Some 13% of the Sri Lanka’s 21 million people are Tamil.
After receiving the report, which calls for investigations into these allegations, Ban Ki-moon stated that he did not have the power alone but that one of three UN bodies could request such action by either the General Assembly or the Security Council or the Human Rights Council.                Read more

Sri Lankan death row prisoners go on hunger strike

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/52906000/gif/_52906822_lanka_0511.gifHundreds of prisoners on death row or serving life in jail in Sri Lanka are staging a hunger strike.
They are trying to try to persuade the government to set them free or commute their sentences.
Around 600 prisoners at Columbo's Welikada jail refused food on Monday, and there are reports of similar protests in two other prisons.
Despite the large number of prisoners on death row, Sri Lanka has not carried out capital punishment since 1977.
However, in the late 1990s it suspended a process whereby sentences used to be regularly commuted, so many inmates have no idea what the future holds.
The head of the prisons service, Maj-Gen V.R. de Silva, told the BBC that more than 600 of the 4,000 prisoners at the high-security Welikada prison had refused food on Monday morning.
Twenty were demonstrating on the prison roof. There are reports of similar protests, also involving large numbers, in two jails outside Colombo.
The number involved has grown since last Thursday, when more than 100 prisoners started a demonstration demanding that the authorities rescind their death sentences.
Maj-Gen de Silva said the protesting prisoners are convicted of crimes including murder, rape and drug-trafficking.
They are said to be unhappy that they were not included in a general amnesty implemented for more than 800 more minor offenders a week ago.
The wheels of justice move notoriously slowly in Sri Lanka and the jails are said to be severely overcrowded, with poor conditions.
A committee has been set up to go through individuals' files, but the head of the prison service warned that a solution could not be found overnight.

Sri Lanka begins military-led training for university entrants


COLOMBO | Mon May 23, 2011 3:56pm IST
(Reuters) - Sri Lanka on Monday began compulsory military-led training for thousands of university entrants, despite protests by opposition-backed student unions that called it the government's latest move to militarise the country.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa's government has ordered 22,000 university entrants to attend what it calls "leadership and positive-thinking training" for three weeks at 28 military camps islandwide. The first 12,000 began on Monday.
Sri Lanka's traditionally influential student unions have long been bellwethers of political unrest. They were key parts of the deadly 1971 and 1988-89 insurrections led by the Marxist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), or People's Freedom Party.
"We commenced these theoretical and practical training courses to develop leadership ability and positive attitudes," Higher Education Minister S.B. Dissanayake told Reuters.
The largest student union, the Inter University Students Federation (IUSF), rejected the training as a government method of coercing political support. The IUSF has long been seen as the student wing of the JVP, which is now in opposition.
"This is another step of this dictatorial government's agenda of militarising the society," IUSF leader Sanjeewa Bandara told Reuters.
He said the IUSF did not mind receiving training, but said it should be given by mutual consent and not by force.
"They are trying to terrify and suppress students by conducting the training forcibly in military camps so they can have a loyal group of students to fulfil their political agendas," Bandara said.
The IUSF has filed a Supreme Court challenge against the training. The court asked if the programme could be delayed by a week to give it time to rule, but the government refused.
Rights groups and opposition critics have said the Rajapaksa administration has spread military influence into every corner of government since defeating the Tamil Tigers' three-decade separatist insurgency two years ago.
Most of the top military commanders have been given diplomatic or other influential government posts since the war's end. Soldiers are being used in post-war rebuilding efforts and even sold vegetables after floods in January and February ruined crops and prompted hoarding by private vendors.
Dissanayake defended the programme as aimed at giving students skills they need to succeed in the private sector.
"This training course is not a weapons training or military training. We think that university students should be fortified with the weapon of knowledge," he said. "This is only one programme aimed at creating a disciplined generation."
(Writing by Bryson Hull; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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Removing the Emperor’s Clothes

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Why military style leadership training for university students of Sri Lanka? 

Original image from Lanka Polity

Universities, academics and university students have been hogging the limelight in the last several weeks in unprecedented ways. The Rajapakse regime’s systematic destruction of the higher education system in this country has run into a few impediments.  University academics from around the country have emerged from a partly self-induced exile and have finally started making themselves heard. On the other hand, the preposterous scheme of sending new entrants to the university for ‘leadership training’ to military camps has also provoked a series of protests. Whatever the outcome of the academics trade union action or the protests against the ‘leadership training’, higher education in our country will never be the same again.  We will be able to assess in a few months, if this will lead to a victory for higher education in Sri Lanka or the further strengthening of the totalitarian Rajapakse project. The stakes are huge. And the regime knows this, which is why it is pulling out all its heavy guns against this unprecedented level of dissent.
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Some thoughts on the Buddha and his teaching

testMay 17, 2011, 12:00 pmby Professor Emeritus
Y. Karunadasa PhD
As we all know, the Buddha was the founder of the religion that has come to be known today as Buddhism.   

Two Nations-Hot- News Full Story>>>

Uprooted Champoor Tamils show resolution to get back their land


Sunday, May 22, 2011

The Reckoning: Press Freedom in Sri Lanka

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groundviews journalism For

19 May, 2011 Nirmanusan Balasundaram Colombo, Media and Communications, Peace and Conflict
Cartoon by Carlos Latuff
“The freedom to speak and the freedom to write are essential preconditions for the transition towards democracy and good governance”
We are living in the world, in which committed journalists writes the news not only with ink, but also with their blood. This is the very reason that their souls still exists with us even after their tragic deaths. Sri Lanka is the very recent example for such context.    Continue reading »
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Sri Lanka Tamil Genocide: Killing the Messenger

May-21-2011
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Slaughter of Pro-Tamil Journalists Dimmed World's View of Sri Lanka Genocide. Warning: contains graphic images... 
(SALEM, Ore.) - One sure way to keep a national genocide out of world view is to slay the journalists who would reveal the information.    
Sri Lanka's president subscribes to this idea and as a result, from the time he took office in 2005 until the 2009, when the Sri Lankan government crushed the Tamil resistance; between 20,000 and 100,000 people were killed. By some accounts up to 146,000 Tamil people were disappeared or killed. Severe incidents of cruelty were widely reported and documented[1].
One of the first things Sri Lanka Pres. Mahinda Rajapaksa did after entering office, was shatter the fragile peace that existed in his country[2].
                                                                  
Artwork by the amazing Carlos Latuff, friend of
Salem-News in Rio de Janeiro. See his work:
Latuff Gallery
Full Story>>> 

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Lanka launches pre-emptive strike at UNHRC

http://sundaytimes.lk/images/sundaylogo_new.jpgSunday, May 22nd 2011By Chandani Kirinde Sri Lanka is to carry out a pre-emptive campaign ahead of the UN Human Rights Council sessions in Geneva next week to ward-off any moves to trigger a debate on allegations of human rights violations during the last stages of the fighting against the LTTE.
Plantations Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe who has also been assigned the subject of human rights will lead the Sri Lanka delegation to the Council’s 17th session which begins in Geneva on May 30. With him is Irrigation Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva. The two ministers will launch the pre-emptive campaign along with Attorney General Mohan Peiris who will join them soon.       Read more...
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http://truthdive.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/TruthDiveLogo.gif May 22, 2011 By Guest Writer Kandhan    
Japans tsunami and the parallels of Tamil Genocide in Sri Lanka 

Many wonder, is there any connection between “Tamil Genocide” in Sri Lanka and the “Earthquake cum Tsunami” in Japan? Japan’s twin natural disaster followed by the huge blasts that has caused further damages at nuclear power plants and fears of a nuclear meltdown may have some parallels with the genocidal war in this other tiny island nation in the Asian continent.
A Tamil residential area of Sri Lanka - Before and After shelling by Army: Before and After: Right image (May 10) shows significant removal of IDP shelters compared to left image (May 6). Copyright 2009 DigitalGlobe.Before scrutinizing the role of Japan in the genocide of the Tamils in Sri Lanka, let me extend my heartfelt condolences to the people of Japan in the wake of a record-breaking earthquake there that triggered a tsunami.

 A Tamil residential area of Sri Lanka - Before and After
shelling by Army: Before and After: Right image (May 10)
shows significant removal of IDP shelters compared to left
image (May 6). Copyright 2009 DigitalGlobe.
                                                                              Read More