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, November 5, 2011

Bad Cops

    By Gazala Anver and Imaad Majeed
Public outcry against police killings - Pictures Courtesy: thelondoneveningpost.com
In the space of just a year, the number of atrocities committed by Sri Lanka’s police has doubled from 50 in 2010 to 102 in 2011. Over the past 17 years, only five convictions of torture have been ruled by the Sri Lankan courts.
This is despite the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) receiving over 1,500 reports of police misconduct between 1998 and 2011.
The cases are not only numerous but horrendous incidents of police torture, abuse and murder. A shocking indictment on Sri Lanka’s law enforcement authority reduced today to a mere shadow of its once envious reputation of discipline and authority.
Our story today encapsulates and brings into focus some of the more shocking crimes committed not by hardcore criminals but by law enforcement officers wearing the uniform of the Sri Lanka police.
A uniform which is regarded with both fear and disgust by society. Blotted with the blood of civilian lives taken by cops violating every rule in the book.                             
police water killing

New project awarded to CATIC

BBCSinhala.com04 November, 2011
By Charles Haviland
BBC News, Colombo
Galle Face Green
A hotel project by CATIC near Galle Face Green has recently been cancelled
Sri Lanka has awarded a business contract to a Chinese state-owned defence contractor, just days after a hotel deal with the same company collapsed.
The deal came as reports said the company, China National Aero Technology Import and Export Corporation or CATIC, might have been planning to sue the Sri Lankan government.
The Chinese state-owned CATIC is an exporter of military planes to Sri Lanka but also has other interests.
It is now secured a 90 million-dollar contract to relocate and develop a university department near the capital.
The cabinet approved the deal just nine days after the government withdrew a contract for the same company to build a luxury city hotel complex worth 500 million dollars on prime seafront land.
Hotel project
It hurriedly rescinded an agreement to sell the land outright, saying that in fact only leases were acceptable – despite an adjacent land sale to the Hong Kong-based Shangri-La hotel group having gone through.
The government now appears anxious to placate the Chinese conglomerate at a time when Chinese loans are funding many big building projects here including roads, railways, a port and an airport.
The main opposition party campaigned hard against the sale of the seafront land, and alleges that someone must be benefiting from the deals with Chinese firms.
The government accuses the opposition of discouraging investment.
But the Sri Lanka-based Sunday Times newspaper has accused the government of making business decisions “without any rational thought”, saying that as a result, no one is rushing to invest in Sri Lanka.
Meanwhile, government supporters have stormed and occupied the sugar factory in Sevanagala which is owned by an opposition politician but which the government has vowed to nationalise under a controversial new bill.

Losing Canadian aid big loss, but survivable: Sri Lankan minister

Canada.comNOVEMBER 4, 2011

 

Sri Lanka will get by if Canada withdraws aid support, says a senior Sri Lankan minister.

Photograph by: S.KODIKARA, AFP/Getty Images

Sri Lanka will get by if Canada withdraws aid support, says a senior Sri Lankan minister.OTTAWA — While he's hoping Canada will not boycott the next Commonwealth summit in Colombo, Sri Lanka, or cut aid over war crimes allegations, a senior Sri Lankan minister says his country will survive if it does.
"It would be a big loss," Vasudeva Nanayakkara told Postmedia News in an interview at the Sri Lankan High Commission in Ottawa. "But we'll do without it."
A UN report commissioned by Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon recently found "credible allegations" that Sri Lankan government forces and the rebel Tamil Tigers committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in the final months of the country's civil conflict in May 2009.
The Sri Lankan government, however, has refused to accept an independent investigation — a position Prime Minister Stephen Harper criticized in the leadup to last weekend's Commonwealth leaders summit in Australia.
Unless those concerns are resolved within the next two years, Harper said, Canada will not attend the next Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka in 2013.
Harper also led the charge in demanding better human rights accountability within the Commonwealth — a position that sharply divided the 54-member group and was largely rejected after opposition from Sri Lanka and African states.
Canada is the second-largest contributor to the Commonwealth. Canada also has a long-standing relationship with Sri Lanka. It has contributed hundreds of millions of dollars in aid since the 1950s, including $35 million since the civil war ended.
Nanayakkara, the Sri Lankan minister of languages and social integration, said his country still requires assistance from the international community, and he encouraged Canada not to abandon it at this time.
"We need the support of all countries, particularly of Canada," he said. "As they have supported materially, they must give us moral strength to return to normalcy."
But he reiterated that if Canada were to cut aid ties or boycott the next Commonwealth summit, "we will have to do without."
"It would be too bad if Canada did not participate, especially when the venue is Sri Lanka," he said.
Nanayakkara rejected the UN report's conclusion, which found credible allegations the government killed civilians through "widespread shelling," including at hospitals, that it denied humanitarian assistance and that it tried to silence the media and critics through intimidation tactics.
"The panel report was biased and based on one-sided evidence," he said. "We had no chance to get our ideas across to the panel before they finished their report."
If the UN Human Rights Council were to order an investigation into the allegations, Nanayakkara said his government would agree to open its doors. But an independent investigation would violate Sri Lanka's sovereignty, he said.
In the meantime, Sri Lanka has set up its own commission to study the final days of the war, he said, with a final report due Nov. 15.
Nanayakkara alleged Harper and the Canadian government are being swayed by members of Canada's estimated 300,000-strong Tamil community in their demands for an independent investigation.
"This diaspora has prominent offices, prominent cadres and paid cadres who run offices in order to keep disseminating their information," he said.
"Perhaps the legislators and the political parties tend to think what the diaspora Tamils, hardliners, are now complaining about is all true."
Canadian Tamil Congress spokesman David Poopalapillai rejected the allegations, saying Canada is standing up for human rights.
"We are very happy as Tamil-Canadians that Canada and the prime minister have taken a very strong stand on this," he said. "Traditionally, Canada has stood for marginalized people. I think our prime minister is following the same path."

DEATH THREATS AGAINST NEWSPAPER EDITOR

RSF
  • WEDNESDAY 2 NOVEMBER 2011.
Death threats against newspaper editor
Reporters Without Borders has written an open letter to President Mahinda Rajapaksa urging him to take whatever measures are necessary to protect Frederica Jansz, the editor of The Sunday Leader, and to ensure that those responsible for last week’s death threats against her are arrested.
The threatening letter Jansz received on 27 October was prompted by her 2009 interview with Gen. Sarath Fonseka, a former army commander and presidential candidate in 2010, in which Fonseka accused defence minister Gotabhaya Rajapaksa of ordering soldiers to kill Tamil Tiger rebels who wanted to surrender. This is not the first time Jansz has been threatened.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa
Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
Temple Trees
Colombo 3, Sri Lanka
31 October 2011
Dear President Rajapaksa,
Reporters Without Borders, an international organization that defends freedom of information, would like to share with you its concern about the threats received last week by Frederica Jansz, the editor of The Sunday Leader.
On 27 October, Ms. Jansz received an anonymous hand-written letter claiming to come from the “Sinha regiment.” It criticized her for her involvement in the “White Flag” trial, in which a verdict is due on 18 November. Ms. Jansz is regarded as a key witness in this trial because of the front page story she wrote for the newspaper on 13 December 2009. It was an interview with former army commander Gen. Sarath Fonseka, in which he told Ms. Jansz that Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa had given the order to kill three members of the Tamil Tigers (LTTE) who wanted to surrender. Many officers saw this statement as a betrayal. Gen. Fonseka, who subsequently said his comments were taken out of context, is being tried for making false statements.
The Sinha regiment that seems to be threatening Ms. Jansz used to be commanded by Gen. Fonseka when he was a senior army officer. The regiment is accusing her of providing the judicial system with false evidence.
This is not the first time that Ms. Jansz has been target of such threats. The first threats were received shortly after she had provided the evidence. The Sunday Leader’s journalists are often the targets of all sorts of intimidation. We remind you of the January 2009 murder of the newspaper’s then editor, Lasantha Wickrematunga, which was never properly investigated.
Ms. Jansz filed a complaint with the police after receiving this letter. So far, she has received no protection. As a verdict will soon be issued, we are extremely concerned for Ms. Jansz’s safety during the days and weeks to come.
Although more than two years have gone by since the army’s victory over the Tamil Tigers, media freedom and pluralism have not improved in Sri Lanka, as The Sunday Leader’s precarious situation shows. The chairman of the TNL media group, Shan Wickremesinghe, and its general manager, Sudath Jayasundara, have also received death threats from individuals with close connections to your government. We are worried about the safety of Sri Lankan journalists, who are working in an increasingly fraught environment and are caught between the different forces – political and non-political – operating in your country.
We therefore urge you to give orders for these threats to be properly investigated and to take whatever measures are necessary to ensure that they stop. The Sri Lanka authorities should also be ready to provide proper protection to Ms. Jansz or any other journalist if they desire it.
I thank you for the attention you give to this letter.
Sincerely,
Jean-François Julliard
Reporters Without Borders secretary-general

Salil Shetty: Commonwealth should stand up for human rights

By Salil Shetty Thursday Nov 3, 2011

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, left, shakes hands with Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Sri Lanka's commitment to human rights is troubling, writes Amnesty International. Photo / AP
EXPAND

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, left, shakes hands with Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Sri Lanka's commitment to human rights is troubling, writes Amnesty International. Photo / AP

A government accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity and numerous human rights violations is set to take control of an organisation of governments representing more than 2 billion people around the world.
Sri Lanka is to pick up the baton from Australia as the next head of the Commonwealth from 2013 to 2015. And most of the governments that make up the 54-member union appear content to let it happen.
They appear content to ignore the Sri Lankan government's record in the closing days of its long war with the Tamil Tigers, and the long list of human rights abuses committed by both sides compiled by Amnesty International and other organisations since hostilities ended. And they appear content to remain quiet as calls for an independent international investigation into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by all sides grow louder.
More than 300,000 people were trapped by the fighting in the final weeks of the war. Some were herded into government declared "safe zones", only to be deprived of adequate food, water and medical care and systematically bombarded by the army's heavy artillery.
Others were used by the Tigers as human shields or watched helplessly as their children were forced to join the rebel army. Those caught trying to flee were shot. By the end, more than 10,000 of them were dead.
Emerging accounts of atrocities were so severe that United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon commissioned a panel of experts to advise him on the best way to ensure those responsible for possible war crimes and crimes against humanity were brought to justice.More>>&gt



UK MPs ask questions in the House of Commons regarding Sri Lanka and alleged human rights abuses

Parliament UK

Sri Lanka

Jeremy Corbyn: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs when the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State most recently visited Sir Lanka; which Ministers and officials in the government of Sri Lanka he met; whether the export of military, security or police equipment was discussed; and if he will make a statement. [77404]
Alistair Burt: I visited Sri Lanka between 21 and 23 February. I met the Economic Development Minister, Basil Rajapaksa, Defence Secretary, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, and Foreign Minister, GL Peiris. I also met with members of the Tamil National Alliance and the United National Party. The export of military, security and police equipment was not discussed.

Sri Lanka: Human Rights

Mr Thomas: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs whether he has received reports of human rights abuses committed against those of Tamil origin in Sri Lanka since May 2010; and if he will make a statement. [77355]

1 Nov 2011 : Column 585W
Alistair Burt: We continue to have concerns about human rights in Sri Lanka. These are detailed in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Human Rights and Democracy Report 2010 where Sri Lanka is listed as a country of concern. Our high commission in Colombo continues to monitor the situation.
We consistently raise our concerns with the Sri Lankan Government, most recently when I spoke to the Sri Lankan Foreign Minister on 20 October. We also regularly urge the Sri Lankan Government to improve the human rights situation for vulnerable groups, to investigate incidents and to prosecute those responsible.

Tibet: Human Rights

Mr Laurence Robertson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what recent discussions his Department has had with the Government of China on (a) the human rights situation in Tibet and (b) the well-being of Lobsang Kalsang, Lobsang Konchok and Kalsang Wangchuk; and if he will make a statement. [77828]
Mr Jeremy Browne: Tibet was discussed at the last round of the UK-China Human Rights dialogue in January 2011, and the dialogue also included an expert workshop on minority rights and languages, an area of particular relevance to Tibet. Ministers have regularly raised our concerns about the human rights situation in Tibet with China at the highest political levels.
We are particularly concerned at recent reports that a nun and young monks, including Lobsang Kalsang, Lobsang Konchock and Kalsang Wangchuk, in Tibetan areas of Sichuan province have self-immolated. I have written to the Chinese ambassador in April this year raising my concerns regarding the situation at the Kirti monastery. More recently Foreign and Commonwealth Office officials have raised their concerns with the Chinese embassy in London and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, urging the Chinese Government to work with local monasteries and communities to resolve the grievances which have led to these self-immolations. Our embassy officials in China make regular visits to Tibetan areas, and have done so recently. We have kept in frequent contact with the Foreign Affairs Office in Sichuan and local Public Security Bureau offices regarding access to these areas.
Our consistent position has been that long-term stability can only be achieved through respect for human rights and genuine autonomy for Tibet within the framework of the Chinese constitution. Meaningful dialogue between the Dalai Lama's representatives and the Chinese authorities is the best way to make this happen.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Tamils disillusioned on SLanka power-sharing talks

http://www.taiwannews.com.tw/etn/images/top_1.jpg
By MATTHEW PENNINGTON     Taiwan News
Associated Press
2011-11-05 03:57 AM
Sri Lanka's main Tamil opposition party has told senior U.S. officials that the island nation's government is not serious about power-sharing and probing allegations of war crimes, a visiting lawmaker said Friday.
The complaint from the Tamil National Alliance comes ahead of a Sri Lankan government-appointed panel's findings expected this month on the 26-year civil war. If it fails to address the reported deaths of thousands of Tamil civilians in the last months of the war, international pressure is likely to grow for a U.N.-backed investigation.
Ahead of the panel's findings, lawmakers from the alliance, a proxy of the defeated and now-defunct Tamil Tiger rebels, have been meeting with senior officials and lawmakers in the United States and Canada and at the United Nations.
The alliance, which swept July local council elections held in areas ravaged by the war, has abandoned the rebels' demand for an independent Tamil state and instead is calling for more autonomy within a federation. Tamils who have historically faced discrimination at the hands of the ethnic majority Sinhalese who dominate the government.
"The message that we have given is that we are disappointed and disillusioned at the Sri Lankan government's failure to show the political will" in sharing political power and postwar rehabilitation, lawmaker M.A. Sumanthiran told The Associated Press.
Speaking by phone from New York, Sumanthiran expressed frustration over the 12 rounds of power-sharing talks since January and what he said was the government's failure to respond to the alliance's proposal for more Tamil authority over security, land, education and cultural issues.
The alliance has already pulled out of the talks once. It returned to the table in October, but Sumanthiran said if the government did not make clear its position by year's end, the alliance would again reassess its participation in the negotiations.
Sumanthiran, who is a prominent human rights lawyer in Sri Lanka, also expressed skepticism about the government-appointed Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission, which is due to report its findings to President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Nov. 15. He said it lacked the mandate to probe allegations of atrocities.
"The truth as to what happened must be ascertained and laid bare for reconciliation to take place," he said.
In September, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon sent an expert report to the U.N. Human Rights Council that concluded that tens of thousands of people were killed in the last five months of the war in 2009, primarily by government troops.
Ban has said he needs a mandate from the U.N. Human Rights Council, Security Council or the General Assembly to initiate an international inquiry.
The Sri Lankan government has rejected allegations of atrocities and says it brought stability to a nation wracked by a quarter-century of conflict and terrorist attacks. It also says it has moved to resettle some 300,000 Tamils who were interned in camps after they displaced by the fighting in the east and north of the island.
Sumanthiran said more than 200,000 of those Tamils have been unable to return to their homes, and are staying in makeshift shelters or with host families. He also complained about a still-pervasive military presence in the region and occupation of land.

Case to be filed against Anoma



The verdict of the controversial White Flag case filed against Fonseka by the Attorney General on a directive by the Defence Secretary is to be delivered on the 18th, which is also the President’s birthday

(November 04, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The President’s Attorney General’s Department is preparing to file a case against former Army Commander who is currently in jail, Sarath Fonseka’s wife, Anoma Fonseka.
She is to be accused of conspiring to send their son in law Danuna Thilekaratne out of the country.

CID officers who investigated into the matter have handed over the relevant files to the Attorney General’s Department.

The CID has also informed the Attorney general’s Department that Danuna Thilekaratne who is under an arrest warrant was currently living in the US.

The governing party is to also present a motion against former Chief Justice Sarath N. Silva who supported the Opposition’s Common Candidate at the Presidential election Sarath Fonseka to parliament on the 8th.

Meanwhile, the verdict of the controversial White Flag case filed against Fonseka by the Attorney General on a directive by the Defence Secretary is to be delivered on the 18th, which is also the President’s birthday.

US Congressman’s ‘Sri Lanka interest’ surpasses care for own constituency


TamilNet

[TamilNet, Friday, 04 November 2011, 20:13 GMT]
US Congressman of the Democratic Party, Heath Shuler, ‘sacrificed’ the interests of his own constituency in order to visit Sri Lanka last month and give a clean chit to the genocidal regime of Rajapaksa. He was absent at his own city Asheville in North Carolina, when Obama visited the city on October 17. He stands for re-election in the constituency next year. This was Shuler’s second visit to Sri Lanka since the end of war in 2009 and both his visits were paid by the Colombo regime. According to the US media reports, Shuler believes that the US could learn a lot from the diligence and triumph of Sri Lanka and he was cited saying “Sri Lanka is a long-time ally of ours and is accomplishing some incredible things right now.” Shuler, a businessman by profession, finds progress “tremendous” in the island. “I didn’t see any current evidence of human rights issues,” Shuler has told media. 

Shuler visits Gotabhaya
Shuler was on a visit to Sri Lanka along with fellow Congressmen, Jack Kingston and Ben Chandler on a ‘fact-finding mission’ paid by Sri Lanka and coordinated by the US State Department under the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange programme.

The US State Department coordinated visit is “in advance of the release of the Sri Lankan’s “Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission” report and to see the progress the country has made since the end of its civil war,” Shuler was cited by the US media this week. 

Shuler is said to have travelled to areas considered questionable by human rights groups and he claimed meeting people from all political parties and groups.

“I visited Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps, I’ve spoken to both opposition Tamil leaders and government officials and people from all political parties and groups, and I didn’t see any current evidence of human rights issues,” Shuler said, adding that “Today, Sri Lanka has largely free and fair elections, and the government has resettled nearly all of the country’s 300,000 displaced persons and is working to remove the last of the land mines.”

Shuler presented a favourable picture on Colombo’s willingness to improve on accountability for those who died and missing as well as in rebuilding homes and economy.

Shuler said nothing on political solution.

The Sri Lankan State and the regime of Rajapaksa that committed ‘genocide without witness’ to win a war and continue committing structural genocide to erase the Eezham Tamil nation and its national question in the island, harps on ‘friends’ in the international Establishments to shield all the crimes. The ‘friends’ who are the real architects of the whole course guarantee the bailout and silencing the international system.

Only the tip of the iceberg was exposed when the British Defence Secretary had to resign recently on his Sri Lanka connections. 

Brittney Parker, Staff Writer who reported Shuler’s Sri Lanka visit in the US local media The Macon County News, described the visit as Shuler’s “international outreach.”

According to this reporter, “During the reign of the Tamil Tigers, tens of thousands of Sri Lankan citizens had become displaced, travelling to parts of Canada, America, and Europe, in attempt to escape the harsh regime.”

“Since Congressman Shuler’s initial visit, the Sri Lankan government has successfully resettled citizens and began rebuilding their infrastructure in order to rebuild its economy,” she further reported.

Vigilance is said to be the backbone of democracy and literacy as well as media are said to be the prerequisites for vigilance.

But it often happens that vigilance is much better in ‘illiterate democracies’ where people do care for what their politicians and media are doing, while in the so-called literate democracies selfish disregard allows international outreach of political crimes and blatant lies of media.

Related Articles:
06.06.09   Congressman Shuler contradicts Rights groups after Colombo f.. 

External Links:
Citizens-Times: Where was Shuler during Obama's visit? Sri Lanka
Maconnews: Shuler deems progress ‘tremendous’ on return trip to Sri Lanka