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, November 4, 2011

11 Tibetans commit self-immolation protesting Chinese occupation

TamilNet[TamilNet, Saturday, 05 November 2011, 00:20 GMT]
With a 35-year-old Tibetan Buddhist nun immolating herself in Eastern Tibet on Thursday, the number of Tibetans committing self-immolation protesting China’s genocidal occupation of Tibet rises to 11 in the recent months. The escalation in self-immolation is a result of China intensifying martial law rule in occupied Tibet. The Tibetan diaspora in India, Nepal and elsewhere paid homage to the martyrs, but even a peaceful prayer gathering of around 400 Tibetans including 150 monks in Kathmandu was interrupted by Nepalese riot police that pulled down a banner of Dalai Lama, angering the Tibetan diaspora. Nepal says it cannot allow protests against ‘friendly’ nations such as China. Peoples of South Asia, especially Tamils have to show full solidarity to Tibetans oppressed by the Establishments, Buddhist circles in Tamil Nadu said. 

Buddhist nun commits self-immolation
35-year-old Buddhist nun committed self-immolation in Chinese-occupied Tibet on Thursday
Tibetans protest
Monks of the Tibetan Diaspora in a South Indian settlement, Gadan Jangtse, holding hunger strike protesting Chinese oppression resulting in self-immolations
The Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka will not voice for their brethren in Tibet, because they depend on China for support and models to follow in carrying out the genocide against Eezham Tamils. Sometimes back, Tibetan organisations accused the Editor of the Chennai-based The Hindu for conniving with Chinese against Tibetans. Peoples of the nations facing military occupation and genocide should rise up in solidarity against common enemies, the Tamil Buddhist circles in Tamil Nadu said.

Such acts of solidarity go beyond religious affiliations whether it is Buddhists of Tibet, Muslims of Philippines or animists of South Sudan. For over 50 years South Asia did nothing to the cause of Tibetans who came into South Asian countries as refugees and peacefully pursued their cause, the Tamil Buddhist activists pointed out, adding that the cause of Tibetans is a South Asian cause. 

The fate of Eezham Tamils will be worse, even within a much shorter span of time, if Tamils don’t rise up in solidarity against the common enemies. Tibetans have no numbers outside of Tibet. But even after having the numbers on their side, Tamils of Tamil Nadu are unable to stop occupation and genocide of the country of Eezham Tamils, the activists further said.

They also urged the Tamil diaspora in the West and elsewhere to act in solidarity with the Tibetans.

Tibetans have a large colony at Gonikoppal located in the Tamil Nadu - Karnataka border.
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Tibetan nun burns herself to death in China



US have high expectations for the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission report!

U.S. Department of State - Great SealVictoria Nuland
Spokesperson
Daily Press Briefing
Washington, DC
November 3, 2011

Goyal, on Sri Lanka. You’ve been so patient.
QUESTION: (Inaudible.) Thank you very much. As we still wait for the report on November 15 by the Sri Lankan Government, in the meantime the report had been coming that things are changing in Sri Lanka as far as economically and also humanitarian aids. And also for the Sri Lankan Ambassador in Washington is saying that his country’s moving forward and IMF has now more interest and also faith in Sri Lanka’s economy and for – my question is a number of lawmakers, U.S. lawmakers, visited Sri Lanka recently. They came back and also they had a positive view of Sri Lanka’s moving forward.
Now, Sri Lanka’s lawmakers were in Washington, here in the State Department also, but I want to know what they had to say and what happened during their visit as far as things in Sri Lanka, please, as far as Tamils are concerned. These are – these were the Tamil lawmakers.
MS. NULAND: Right. The Tamil National Alliance representatives were in Washington last week. They met in the State Department with Under Secretary of State Sherman. I’ll leave to them to characterize their views. Under Secretary Sherman’s main point was that we have high expectations for the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission report which is due later in the month – not only that the report will be of highest quality, but that the Sri Lankan Government will take steps to implement it. So that was the main message that we were giving, and we look forward to seeing that report.
QUESTION: Is Secretary aware of these movements in Sri Lanka?
MS. NULAND: Absolutely.
QUESTION: Thank you, ma’am.
MS. NULAND: Thank you very much.

Sri Lanka army to run cricket stadiums


BBC News   ASIA
By Charles Haviland
BBC News, Colombo
Colombo's R Premadasa stadium will be taken over by the air force
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/56449000/jpg/_56449619_013081562-1.jpg
The armed forces in Sri Lanka are to take over maintenance of the country's most prestigious cricket stadiums.

The country's heavily indebted cricket board says it can no longer afford to carry out the task.
The sports ministry has announced that the army, navy and air force will each look after one stadium
However, some Sri Lankans expressed concern at the move, with one opposition MP saying that the military was "taking over everything".
Deep in debt
When it jointly hosted the Cricket World Cup this year, Sri Lanka built two shiny new stadiums - one of them in the president's home district - and completely renovated another.
The expense was huge - some of the loans haven't yet been repaid - and the cricket board is now deep in debt.
The sports ministry said the army, navy and air force would do the maintenance work - and probably the security on match days as well - at one stadium each.
A member of the cricket board and former national player, Sidath Wettimuny, told the BBC this was because the board's finances were so depleted.
But opposition MP Harin Fernando said he was "utterly shocked" by the forces' involvement.
Noting that the army was also selling vegetables and building city infrastructure, he commented that the military was "taking over everything" according to the whims of the country's defence secretary.
Mr Fernando said the trend was harming civilians' jobs and salaries and that the armed forces' morale was also suffering.
The cricket board has failed to pay players' salaries for several months.
Its new chairman has criticised his predecessors for spending so much money on stadiums, and fans say other well-established grounds are now being neglected.

Does the present regime encourage lawlessness & promote political thuggery?

http://a0.twimg.com/profile_images/877084884/Groundviews_bigger.jpg *groundview journalism For citizens  4 Nov, 2011

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity
(The second coming – by W.B. Yeats – 1865 – 1939)
Considering the far too many incidents of violence and thuggery carried out recently with such impunity, one cannot blame the people if they raise this question. The government seems to rely heavily on thuggery and lawlessness to win elections and once in power to hold on to it. Any kind of protest or dissent is put down ruthlessly.Continue reading »
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Peace, Military and People: Are non-military engagements of the military valid?

20110107_VG1
Sri Lankan Army selling vegetables. Photo: Ministry of Defence – Sri Lanka War or internal armed conflict in the North and East was over; Emergency is no more; but still the military is everywhere. The military is now engaged in peacetime police-work, whale watching, selling vegetables, agriculture,  cleaning, constructions and many other non-military activities. Yet why isn’t there sufficient public debate on this? In this article I endeavor to briefly analyze some of the issues that need attention in the public interest. Engaging the military for non-military duties is regulated under the law. For example s.23 of the Army Act authorizes the President to order all or any of the member of the Regular Forces to perform certain non-military duties, provided the President is satisfied that there is an immediate threat of action to deprive the people of Sri Lanka of essentials of life by interfering with the supply and distribution of food, water, fuel or light or with means of…
Continue reading »

Refugee in walk of thanks to British

Solihullnews News.net

A POLITICAL refugee from war-torn Sri Lanka is walking from Birmingham to London in aid of Help for Heroes and an orphanage in his homeland.
Johannes Shanmugam, aged 48, will walk the equivalent of four marathons in six days and aims to raise over £10,000 for the armed forces charity and Serendip Children’s Home.
Johannes, who lives in Cheltenham, passed through Solihull on Wednesday on the 120-mile trek.
“Being a Tamil my life was in constant danger during the civil war,” he said.
“I survived four attempts on my life, only because I spoke the ruling governments’ local language of Sinhalese.
“The UK has been a sanctuary for so many Tamil people seeking safety from unjust persecution.
“We have experienced the horrors of war and having made the UK our home, we now want to help British troops be rehabilitated, whilst also supporting orphaned children still in Sri Lanka, who are continuing to suffer.
“The walk itself is a huge thank-you to the British public for the freedom and civil liberties that Tamils have experienced in the UK, still denied to so many Tamil people in Sri Lanka.”
The challenge will finish on Monday at 10 Downing Street where Johannes will deliver a letter to the Prime Minister on behalf of the British-Tamil community, expressing their gratitude.
Last year Johannes, who works for a church, raised over £7,000 for charity in his first Birmingham to London walk.
He added: “It’s so easy to sit at home and say ‘Thank you Britain.’ We want to go out of our comfort zone to say thank you.”
To donate visit www.h2hwalk.org/donate.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

PRESIDENT PERSONALLY PHONES NEWSPAPER’S CHAIRMAN TO THREATEN HIM


RSFTUESDAY 2 AUGUST 2011.
President personally phones newspaper's chairman to threaten himReporters Without Borders firmly condemns the threats that President Mahinda Rajapaksa made in a phone call to the chairman of The Sunday LeaderLal Wickrematunge, on 19 July because of an article reporting that China had given the president and his son, parliamentarian Namal Rajapaksa, money to be used “at their discretion.”
“We are extremely shocked that the president personally phones journalists in order to threaten them.” Reporters Without Borders said. “It is unacceptable that The Sunday Leader, Sri Lanka’s only independent English-language newspaper, should be subjected to such pressure. If the president disagrees with an article, he can respond to it and explain himself in the media. That is how issues are discussed in a democracy.
“We condemn the president’s action as irresponsible. A country’s president is supposed to set an example. But Mahinda Rajapaksa is setting a bad one. It says a lot about the degree of respect he feels for media independence and his political readiness to establish the conditions needed for media freedom. We urge him to change course.
“This is not the first time that a news media has been threatened by members of the Rajapaksa family. We urge the president to put an immediate stop to these warnings and threats against journalists. We also urge Sri Lanka’s media to join together in condemning such behaviour, which can have a real intimidatory effect on the entire media profession.”
When Wickrematunge received the call from President Rajapaksa on 19 July, the president shouted: “You are writing lies, outrageous lies! You can attack me politically, but if you attack me personally, I will know how to attack you personally too.” Around 100 posters with the words “Do not lie!” and “The gods will punish you” also appeared on the walls of the newspaper’s headquarters. (see picture)
Rajapaksa’s call was prompted by an article that editor Frederica Jansz published in the newspaper two days earlier reporting that China had made a grant of 9 million dollars to the president and half a million dollars to the president’s son, to be used “at their discretion.” The newspaper’s attempts to contact the president for an explanation had been unsuccessful.
The Sunday Leader has long been targeted by the government. Lal Wickrematunge’s predecessor at the head of the newspaper, Lasantha Wickrematunge, was murdered on 8 January 2009. The murder was not investigated properly and the culprit was never caught, in a clear sign of ill-will on the part of the authorities. Reporters Without Borders reiterates its call for a proper investigation.
Lal Wickrematunge took charge of the newspaper after his brother’s murder. Now he is the target of intimidation attempts too.
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Editor Threatened

A translation of the threatening letter …Full Story>>>

Frederica Sandra Carmela Jansz, that damn prostitute, you are now safeguarding the President. By you giving evidence to put Mr. Fonseka in trouble he had to go to courts 57 times. You have even printed the Presidents manifesto. Can you remember that there was a comparison of countries run by Generals in Head to Head?

LASANTHA WICKREMATUNGE’S WIDOW AND FELLOW EDITOR SONALI SAMARASINGHE’S STATEMENT, ON HIS SECOND DEATH ANNIVERSARY





Police and Judiciary "can do nothing"

BBCSinhala.com

Hirunika Premachandra
"Duminda Silva was there when my farther was murdered"- Hirunika
Legal procedures were overlooked when Duminda Silva was taken to Singapore for further treatment says Hirunika Premachandra, the daughter of murdered presidential advisor Baratha Lakshman Premachandra.
Parliamentarian Duminda Silva was treated for brain injury as a result of gunshot wounds sustained during the shooting that killed President’s advisor Baratha Lakshman Premachandra. It is reported that Duminda Silva was air lifted to Singapore for further treatment on the 1st of November.
Full Story>>>

Malcolm Fraser: The Commonwealth's Missed Chance




The writer, Malcolm Fraser, was three times Prime Minister of Australia. -- PHOTO: INTERNET
MELBOURNE - Last weekend, representatives of 54 countries, mostly heads of government, attended the bi-annual Commonwealth Meeting. High on the agenda was a report by the Eminent Persons Group (EPG), established to reinvigorate the Commonwealth, strengthen its Secretariat, and transform its approach to human rights. The group included former Australian High Court Justice Michael Kirby, former British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, former Malay Prime Minister Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, and Mozamibique's former first lady (and wife of Nelson Mandela) Graca Machel, among others. The group's recommendations were unanimous.
But the Commonwealth's assembled leaders ignored the report's key recommendation, which concerned the establishment of a Human Rights Commissioner to oversee and report on the actions of member governments. The human-rights performance of Commonwealth countries, both developed and developing, needs improvement in many areas. Unfortunately, some African governments regarded the report as targeting developing countries, though the recommendations would have been just as relevant to certain developed countries that, especially since the terrorist attacks of 2001, have violated basic human-rights protections.
The record of the Commonwealth countries in regard to ethnic minorities can also be substantially improved. In too many countries, minorities, especially indigenous groups, are treated heavy-handedly. Similarly, as refugee flows have altered direction over the last 15 or 20 years, treatment of refugees - enshrined since 1951 in the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees - needs to be re-examined.
Many Commonwealth countries live on the edge of these particular problems. Some have large refugee camps within their borders. Others receive entire families fleeing persecution and terror in their own countries. More light needs to be shed on this problem.
The standards enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights need reinvigorating. Openness, transparency, and better knowledge of conditions in particular countries would do much to raise the level of debate - and thus to ensure greater progress. In too many countries, there is an incipient reversion to racism.
The second major issue for the meeting concerned the civil war in Sri Lanka and whether both the government and the Tamils had committed war crimes in the conflict's final years. The question, however, was virtually ignored. A United Nations Human Rights Commission report suggests that there is substantial evidence of major war crimes by both the government and the Tamil Tigers, especially in the last 2-3 years of the conflict. A separate and entirely independent report by the International Crisis Group came to much the same conclusion.
Indeed, there is now sufficient evidence to justify a full international inquiry into the actions of both sides, potentially leading to indictments before the International Criminal Court. But the Commonwealth leaders suggested that the matter should be managed bilaterally, rather than by the organisation as a whole.
This failure to debate what happened in Sri Lanka may have consequences for the Commonwealth down the line. Indeed, several weeks ago, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper spoke strongly against the lack of action in Sri Lanka, and indicated that if the next Commonwealth meeting is held there, as currently planned, he will not attend. He may not be the only leader to take such a stand when the time comes.
Human rights should be a matter on which the Commonwealth stands united, with firmness, resolution, and determination. The Commonwealth should be at the forefront of the continuing struggle to promote accountability for violations whenever and wherever they occur. That opportunity has been lost.
The advancement of human rights has taken many different forms. For example, Admiral Lord Michael Boyce, Chief of the Defense Staff of the British Armed Services at the start of the Iraq war, told Prime Minister Tony Blair that he would not order troops to invade unless he was assured unequivocally that the war was legal under British and international law. Unfortunately, the British government's response was extraordinarily deficient, and did not in any sense constitute a valid legal opinion.
The Commonwealth has taken substantive action in the past, especially in relation to Apartheid-era South Africa. Most members of the Commonwealth have signed on to the International Criminal Court, perhaps the most important institutional change in the international legal architecture since the establishment of the UN itself.
The Commonwealth's people deserve much better than what their leaders delivered at the Australia summit. If the Commonwealth is to become the vital international body that its national leaders wish it to be, it needs a different temper and more coherent and effective leadership, as envisaged by the Eminent Persons Group's report. It needs the Human Rights Commissioner. But most of all it needs national leaders who are prepared to act on the basis of conviction and steadfastness of purpose, rather than evading and shirking their responsibilities when divisive issues arise.
Malcolm Fraser was three times Prime Minister of Australia.

SRI LANKA: Education - could do better in the east

Photo: UNICEF
Classroom in Eastern Province, July 2011
BATTICALOA, 3 November 2011 (IRIN) - The decades-long conflict has ended in Sri Lanka, but the damage to the country's educational system lingers, particularly in the disaster-prone east, say families and experts. 

Home to about 1.5 million people, Eastern Province is one of the hardest-hit areas in Sri Lanka by both natural and manmade disasters. Education advocates say schools lack teachers, funds, infrastructure - and attention. 

"Education for us is like another war," said Nirmala Rani, 15, from Batticaloa District. 

School facilities are scarce, while some classes do not even have teachers, the student said. "We really cannot call it an education," Rani said.read more ]

Time to clear up some security clearance doubts



The Drum Opinion

3 NOVEMBER 2011

The floored industry of security clearances needs urgent investigation. (Thinkstock: iStockphoto)
Bruce Haigh
The security clearance industry is just that – an industry.
In theory and more often in practice the more sophisticated a society the more efficient and streamlined is the process for obtaining a security clearance.
Record keeping - births, deaths and marriages - school, trade and university qualifications, police records, military service records and media interventions, mentions and appearances, all assist in building a profile. Couple this with an efficient filing and retrieval system and obtaining a security clearance should be neither difficult nor lengthy.More>>>>

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

What spurious melodrama! what secret manipulations!- All to save kudu Duminda the ‘great’ who murdered Bharatha!!

Duminda Silva’s Rs. 17 million fraud crashes – Dumnida threatened Insurance boss


Colombo Telegraph

 

IN JOURNALISM TRUTH IS A PROCESS
NOVEMBER 2, 2011
By Colombo Telegraph

Duminda Silva’s Rs. 17 million fraud crashes – Dumnida threatened Insurance boss

 Duminda with former IGP  
The Police hasn’t taken any action against Duminda Silva’s Rs 17 million insurance fraud and the threat he made to the insurance company the Colombo Telegraph learnt. The police think there is sufficient evidence to act against MP Duminda Silva but they cannot go further due to extreme political pressure. “We would have been in deep trouble if we raised any issue then,” said one of them familiar with the case.
Duminda Silva MP, submitted the fake claim for Rs 17 million to Janashakithi Insurance. Janashakthi Insurance were told in August 2011 that his four-wheel drive vehicle had met with a horrible accident. It had hit even telephone posts before coming to a halt and was beyond repair.
As reported the story unfolds as follows; The vehicle had been towed to the Boralla police station even before an insurance appraiser arrived. He had later staked his claim for Rs 17 million to buy another brand new vehicle.Duminda Silva MP, submitted the fake claim for Rs 17 million to Janashakithi Insurance. Janashakthi Insurance were told in August 2011 that his four-wheel drive vehicle had met with a horrible accident. It had hit even telephone posts before coming to a halt and was beyond repair. While the insurance company was processing his claim, it also got in touch with its lawyer. He in turn sought the help of a private investigation agency to check on the claims made by the Duminda Silva. It came to light that the vehicle had been insured only two days before the accident. Thereafter, they continued the probe into other aspects. It was to reveal more startling facts — the accident had taken place six days before the vehicle was insured. That meant there was no insurance cover at the time of the accident. That is not all. Some of the photographs submitted after the assessor was allegedly threatened showed another wrecked luxury vehicle that was beyond identification. It came to light that the engine and chassis number of the vehicle that lay at the police station, configured in such a way that the worst accident would not obliterate the markings, was intact and not damaged. Nor was the front area of the vehicle except for sections.
There were mounting threats on the insurance company executives to make payment. At first it came from a relative of Duminda Silva. The threats were directed at the insurance company branch in the suburbs. Later, Duminda Silva raised issue with those at the branch office and at their headquarters in Colombo. They were on the verge of approving payment when another eminent counsel with strong political connections was consulted. He was annoyed at the way threats had been brought on the insurance executives on a fraudulent claim and promised to pursue the matter. He said he would even raise it at the highest levels. One day, the insurance top boss received a call from Duminda Silva. He identified himself and poured out a verbal barrage in choice obscenity. He asked, “what happened to my claim?” The boss replied that the matter was now in the hands of the influential senior counsel and mentioned his name. “I don’t care,” he thundered. He went into a rage and warned that if the Rs. 17 million was not paid pronto, the consequences would be disastrous. The boss said he detested the tone in which Duminda was intimidating him. “You wait and see. My tone would be worse when something happens to you,” and banged the telephone. What Duminda least realised was that the boss’ lawyer was also present when the call was made. The speaker phone was switched on. They took note of the entire conversation.
Immediately thereafter, they went to the Police Station and lodged an entry giving the fuller details. The lawyer, who also made a statement, said he was witness to the episode. The OIC Boralla is unavailable for comment. The Police Officer who answered to Colombo Telegraph call told he is unaware of the case.
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“Duminda Silva is not my man, he is Gota’s man” MR said to Bharatha and Rathnasiri

 Gota’s man and Gota “Duminda
By Colombo Telegraph
Silva is not my man, he is Gota’s man” President Mahinda Rajapkasa said to both Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra and former Prime Minister and senior Minister Rathnasiri Wickkramanayake. Informed sources told the Colombo Telegraph that, three months ago, Bharatha had complained to the President that Duminda Silva had given a contract to underworld thugs to murder him. President Rajapaksa had subsequently ordered the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) to investigate the alleged murder plot.  Two underworld gangsters who were in police custody at that time had given statements to the CID confirming the murder plot. Bharatha Lakshman had secured a copy of this CID investigation report and informed Rathanasiri Wickramanayke, Minister Susil Premajayantha, Alavi Moulana, the Governor of the Western Province, Minister John Senavirathne and some other senior Sri Lanka Freedom Party members about the CID findings.   Full Story»>

Canada Urges UN for an independent investigation in Sri Lanka


Logo

As Canada continuously emphasizes its central pillar of the foreign policy, promote freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law, in the international forums, one of the worst offenders of it, Sri Lanka continuously takes the centre stage of its criticism.
Guillermo E. Rishchynski, Canada’s Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations, in a statement to the Third Committee on the promotion and protection of human rights at United Nations, on October 26, 2011, said, “Canada is also concerned that the underlying sources of conflict in Sri Lanka are not being addressed. As such, we encourage the Government of Sri Lanka to engage constructively on a process of political reconciliation and accountability.”“We also support calls for an independent investigation into credible allegations of violations of international humanitarian law and human rights committed by both parties to the conflict in Sri Lanka, as recommended by the UN Secretary General’s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka.” He further said.The excerpts from the statement by Canada at the United Nations as follows,”Thank you Mr. Chair,The promotion and protection of human rights, a cornerstone of this organization, is a central pillar of Canada’s foreign policy. Canada stands firmly on the protection of human rights and takes principled positions on important issues to promote freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law.Over the past century, the world witnessed brutal despotism, including totalitarian regimes which enslaved their own peoples. We recognize that even today, implementation of human rights remains a challenge. Yet, we are hopeful that we can find common ground in order to advance the rights and fundamental freedoms which we all hold dear…….Canada is also concerned that the underlying sources of conflict in Sri Lanka are not being addressed. As such, we encourage the Government of Sri Lanka to engage constructively on a process of political reconciliation and accountability. We also support calls for an independent investigation into credible allegations of violations of international humanitarian law and human rights committed by both parties to the conflict in Sri Lanka, as recommended by the UN Secretary General’s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka.”

Sri Lankan government boosts military spending



By Saman Gunadasa 
2 November 2011
The Sri Lankan government presented its 2012 budgetary estimates to parliament on October 18, unveiling a nearly 7 percent increase in military expenditure. The boost to already high levels of defence spending indicates that the government, facing a deep financial crisis, is preparing for violent confrontations with working people.
Such is the extent of the fiscal crisis that total budget expenditure for 2012 is estimated at 2.22 trillion rupees ($US20.1 billion), which is double the expected income of 1.1 trillion rupees. President Mahinda Rajapakse, who is also finance minister, will announce proposals on November 21 to meet the trillion-rupee deficit. The government is already imposing new taxes and resorting to foreign and local borrowing, imposing even greater burdens on the backs of workers and the poor.     Full Story>>>