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

Monday, February 13, 2012

Bus strike called off

BBCSinhala.com13 February, 2012

Opposition Leader Ranil Wickramasinghe has called upon the government to convene a emergency meeting of the parliament to discuss the situation

Protest against fuel price hike in Anuradhapura (Photo: Athula Bandara)Bus and lorry operators have staged a day-long strike across Sri Lanka in response to sudden steep rises in the cost of fuel.
Roads have also been blockaded by fishermen who say the price hikes will ruin their livelihood.
The bus strike has now been called off after the authorities said fares will be allowed to rise by 20%, but the fishermen’s blockade will continue on Tuesday.
There are now fears that basic goods will get more expensive.
The sudden and dramatic rises in the cost of oil products came late on Saturday.  Full Story>>>

Armed abduction at the courts

BBCSinhala.com13 February, 2012 

The suspect was abducted in front of the courts
'They took him away after beating the guard. Is this the wonder of Sri Lanka?' questions suspect's wife

A suspect in custody has been abducted by an armed gang that came in a white van, police in Sri Lanka say.
Prison officials Methias Chandrapala, have lodged a complaint with the police, of the abduction in front of the Colombo High Court complex.
The suspect who was in remand custody was released on bail by the court prior to the abduction.
While he was escorted by the prison guards to pay the surety the armed group has abducted him, according to police.
S Ramani, told BBC Sandeshaya that her husband was abducted while in handcuffs.
"They took him away after beating the guard. Is this the law in Sri Lanka? Is this the wonder of Sri Lanka?" she questioned, weeping.
The OIC of Keselwatta police station told journalist KS Udayakumar that an investigation is underway into the incident.

Australia's response to Sri Lanka's LLRC Report

http://www.foreignminister.gov.au/images/coat-of-arms.png



The Hon Kevin Rudd MP 
Australian Minister for Foreign Affair


Media release    Canberra     13 February 2012
The Australian Government has studied closely Sri Lanka's Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) Report, and welcomes its recommendations for addressing the post-conflict situation. It has also expressed concern however that the report fails to fully address alleged violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa formed the LLRC in May 2010 to investigate events during the conflict between February 2002 and May 2009 and to make recommendations to advance restitution and reconciliation. The LLRC included five Sinhalese, two Tamil and one Muslim representatives.
The LLRC report contains 285 principal observations and recommendations divided into six sections: ceasefire agreement; international humanitarian law issues; human rights; land issues; restitution and compensation; and reconciliation.
Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd said the LLRC report contains constructive proposals for advancing reconciliation and reconstruction, including through reducing the presence of security forces in the North, care of internally displaced persons and media freedoms.
"Nonetheless, while the LLRC's conclusion that further investigations need to be undertaken in specific cases is certainly welcome, wider issues relating to accountability need to be dealt with more thoroughly.
"The Australian Government has consistently urged Sri Lanka to investigate all allegations of crimes committed by both sides to the conflict, including those raised in the UN Secretary-General's Panel of Experts report.
"In light of the report's failure to comprehensively address such allegations, we continue to call on Sri Lanka for all such allegations to be investigated in a transparent and independent manner.
"It is now also critical that the Sri Lankan Government endorse the LLRC report's constructive elements and set clear, firm timeframes for their implementation," Mr Rudd said.
Australia provides practical support for Sri Lanka's efforts towards reconciliation and reconstruction in conflict-affected areas.
Since 2009, Australia has supported the clearance of land mines and unexploded ordnance from 74 square kilometres of land and the reconstruction of around 4,600 homes and an estimated 20 schools in northern Sri Lanka.

Media enquiries

  • Minister's office: (02) 6277 7500
  • DFAT Media Liaison: (02) 6261 1555

Abductors threaten the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka

An open letter to the Attorney General

| by Basil Fernando

( February 13, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) We wish to bring to your notice the abduction of Ramasamay Prabhakaran, 42, who was bundled into a white van by seven men armed with assault rifles and hand guns. This was two days before a fundamental rights case filed by him was to be taken up.

Earlier, two other persons who had been pursuing redress before courts for violations of their fundamental rights were assassinated, allegedly by the persons against whom they were pursuing their complaints. One was Gerald Perera, and the violation of his rights was recognized by the Supreme Court. He was killed a few days before he was to give evidence before the Negambo High Court in a case filed against several police officers who were attached to the Wattala police station, under the Convention against Torture (CAT) Act No. 22 of 1993. Sugath Nishantha Fernando, who was pursuing a fundamental rights application relating to torture of himself and his family by 11 police officers working in the Negambo area, was also assassinated, and even up to date no credible inquiry has been carried out into this murder.

Recently, the United Nations human rights committee expressed their view on the torture and assassination of Sugath Nishantha Fernando, and categorically stated that Sri Lanka has failed to provide redress for the violations of his rights. (Ref. Communication No: 1862/2009. Decided on the 17 October 2011-Ref. CCPR/3/103/D1862/2009)
The abduction of Ramasamay Prabhakaran is a direct affront to the Supreme Court. So were the murders of Gerald Perera and Sugath Nishantha Fernando, who were victims who resorted to the courts for protection and in the search for justice.

It is a threat to all persons who wish to come before the Supreme Court and other courts to place their grievances about the violations of their rights, to seek the intervention of the judiciary for their protection and for redress. Such killings have a chilling effect on the administration of justice in Sri Lanka.

It is the duty of the judiciary itself to protect those who come before them seeking protection and justice. If the victims of violations desist from seeking justice due to the reprisals for doing so, the entire administration of justice relating to human rights will hardly be of any use. In the circumstances, it is not surprising that the number of applications filed before the Supreme Court on fundamental rights have declined.

The defeat of judicial intervention is always an objective of the executive who fails to protect the rights of the citizens. The objective of the executive is to defeat judicial interventions and attempt to reduce the judiciary to administrative functions. The attack on the juridical function has taken many forms, including far reaching constitutional changes, and the intimidation of witnesses is part of this strategy.
The foundation of law is the recognition of the juridical. If the recognition of the juridical is displaced by the administrative, then the very foundation of the law is undermined.
The above statement may be explained by going into the meaning of “juridical” as compared to the administrative. Juridical is defined as follows:

Black’s Law Dictionary

Relating to administration of justice, or office of a judge. Regular; done in conformity to the laws of the country and the practice which is there observed.

Merriam-Webster
: of or relating to the administration of justice or the office of a judge
: of or relating to law or jurisprudence : legal

By way of illustration, the meaning of juridical can be explained by comparing it to the term “medical”. Doctors engage as medical professionals under their obligation to think and to make decisions relating to their work on the basis of medical science, theories, and practices. They will analyze a complaint of a patient by way of gathering information, and come to findings on the basis of medical knowledge.

In the same way, those who act within the judicial system are expected to gather information, analyze it and come to findings on the basis of legal notions, and the way the law is practiced.
As compared to this, what administrative means is the way of action of the executive. The considerations on which the executive makes their decisions and proceeds to action are based on considerations pertaining to the administrative field.

Thus, the way those who have obligations under the juridical and those who have obligations under the administrative think and act distinctly and separately.

When those who are in the field of the juridical are compelled by circumstances or by other compulsions to think and act in a similar manner those who are dealing with the administrative, which means those who have obligations under the executive, then the judicial is replaced with the administrative.

Let’s look into a few examples to illustrate this matter. The executive, dealing with the problem of crime, may find it more efficient to arrest and detain persons whom they perceive as creating obstacles to the manner in which the executive is trying to resolve problems.

However, to those who have to act within the juridical, for example, judges, the mere considerations of what may be perceived as efficient is not the basic consideration in dealing with arrest and detention. The judges have to make their decisions on the arrest on the basis of juridical notions which involve the rights of the individuals and personal freedom. In terms of such judicial notions, arrest is permitted only in the process of investigations into a crime so as to bring the person before court, or by way of punishment after conviction. What the law understands as a crime would itself be defined and interpreted only in terms of juridical notions of what a crime is. The executive may want to define crime in terms of whatever it considers an obstacle to its actions. For example, the executive may consider a person leading demonstrations as a threat and may want to arrest and detain him. However, those who are to act within the parameters of the juridical recognize the juridical notions of the freedom to protest and the limits of that freedom is also defined in terms of juridical notions.

The executive may wish to modify the law so as to take away juridical notions and to replace them with administrative policies and considerations. If they succeed, that amounts to the displacement of the juridical and replacement with the administrative.

The independence of the judiciary can only be exercised where the sphere of the judicial is clearly understood, recognized and respected. If the juridical is displaced by the administrative, the very foundation of the independence of the judiciary is undermined to the extent of the undermining of the judicial. If the judges make decisions purely on the basis of administrative considerations, and not basing themselves on considerations based on the juridical, then their decisions too are of administrative nature, and not of juridical substance.
The transformation that has been happening in many countries, particularly in countries where the juridical notions have not been developed or where, after such development, has been displaced by the administrative, has external appearances of the judicial (such as having courts, and judges wearing the costumes of judicial officers, and even making “judgments” and orders), the functions that are being exercised are the functions of the executive, not those belonging to the juridical.

Therefore, as a human rights organization committed to defending the independence of the judiciary and the rights of all citizens to find judicial redress for violations of human rights, we call upon all the judges, particularly the judges of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal to protect the sphere of the juridical in Sri Lanka and not allow it to be submerged into the administrative.

In this particular instance, the abduction of Ramasamay Prabhakaran, we earnestly seek your intervention to ensure the protection of Ramasamay, and also to ensure his protection from a possible forced disappearance or an assassination. We earnestly hope that the judiciary will ensure the possibility of Ramasamay Prabhakaran’s to seek judicial redress before the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka.

MiG 27 jet crashes




 Monday, 13th February 2012



A MiG 27 fighter jet belonging to the Sri Lanka Air Force had reportedly crashed into the Hevana area belonging to the Dummalasooriya police area in the Puttlam district a short while ago.

The Russian built jet was on a routine training mission after departing from the Katunayake Air Force Base. 

Air Force spokesman Group Captain Andy Wijesuriya said that the pilot managed to escape without sustaining any injuries. 

The reason for the crash is yet to be established but it is widely believed that a technical failure in the aging jet had led to the incident. 

The MiG 27 was used by the SLAF during the war, primarily for the ground attack and close air support role.  These jets come under the No.12 Squadron of the SLAF.  (Supun Dias)

Click below to see pictures

The ill-fated MiG 27

The ill-fated MiG 27

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Seen here are pictures of the wreckage of the ill-fated Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) MiG 27 which crashed in to the Dummalasooriya area in Puttalam today. The pilot landed safely after ejecting himself from the jet. A technical error is widely believed to have led to the crash. Pix by Jude Samantha









Probe into massacre in Eelam war sought

Expressbuzz  P K Balachandran  13 Feb 2012
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s main opposition party, United National Party (UNP), has asked the Mahinda Rajapaksa government to investigate the oft-repeated internationally made charge that too many people were killed in the last phase of Eelam War IV. “The statement of Hon Navin Dissanayake (a minister) that 10,000 civilian casualties was a ‘necessary sacrifice’ requires a further investigation,” UNP chief Ranil Wickremesinghe said in a statement here on Friday.
Commenting in detail on the report of the government’s Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) ahead of the UN Human Rights Commission’s session in Geneva beginning on February 27, Wickremesinghe pointed out that the LLRC had not even thought it fit to call minister Dissanayake to give evidence before it.  “Unfortunately, the findings of the commission do not answer the question whether a reasonable effort was made to limit the destruction and damage,” he said.
“The displacement of hundreds of thousands from their homes, the deaths of a large number of civilians, the destruction of private property and the wholesale disappearance of village communities, is a national trauma which will haunt us for a long time and will be in our memories, especially  Tamils’, for many generations to come,” Wickremesinghe said.
On the controversial British Channel 4 video, the UNP leader said the government should set up a nationally and internationally “credible” mechanism to investigate the truth of the charge of wanton killings by the Lankan forces in the last phase of Eelam War IV.

Long Read: Creating Social Reconciliation or Social Implosion?

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13 Feb, 2012  
Photo from The Struggle for Justice blog
Introduction
Lankan society in its post-1948 history has undergone many violent conflicts in the form of pogroms, insurrections, and a civil war. The latest round of violence said to have ended with the military defeat of the LTTE in 2009 continues now at a much lower level, but seems to operate throughout the land. These campaigns of violence have caused collective social trauma within the society.
With the end of the war, the opportunity was ripe to rebuild the country and reconcile the many divisions. During the war, of course, many statements, assurances and pledges were made that the issues of Tamil people that culminated in an armed conflict would be resolved through major constitutional and legal reforms including devolution of power to the periphery, though after the end of the war, such measures are yet to come to fruition.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

13-SOMETHING & TNA’S M.I.A MOVE---------------Some thoughts on the Buddha and his teaching



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Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
“Our duty is to fight until the last minute for our country, for our planet and for humanity.”
- Fidel Castro, Feb 4, 2012, launching his memoir, ‘Guerrilla of Time’
As world class singers of Sri Lankan Tamil parentage go, MIA isn’t half as good as a new voice, Bhi Bhiman, an American singer of blues–tinged folk music with a voice as clear and mournful as the whistle of a lonesome train coming ’round the bend. MIA’s flair for the theatrical far outstrips her singing talent. Giving the finger at the Super Bowl this month seems however to be politically symptomatic, because Mr. MA Sumanthiran, a sophisticated lawyer-politician, has just done that to the 13th amendment and prospects of a moderate yet substantive degree of power sharing. In an interview given to Namini Wijedasa, ‘MAS’ (as the newspaper bills him) says:Continue reading »