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

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Tear gas used on protesters




Police used tear gas to disperse JVP supporters heading to Fort from Maligawatta this evening protesting over the recent increase of oil prices, government corruption and wastage. Oil prices were increased at midnight on Saturday by the government. Pix by Pradeep Pathirana



Read more...

Protesting fisherman shot dead

BBCSinhala.com
Last updated: 15 February, 2012 - Published 12:46 GMT

There have been violent protests in Sri Lanka a few days after the government raised the price of key household fuels by up to 50 percent.
Fisheman killed in ChilawA fisherman was killed as police confronted crowds on the west coast while teargas is being deployed at a big rally in the capital, Colombo.
Unrest and anger
Four days after sudden steep increases in the price of fuel, there is unrest and anger in much of Sri Lanka.
There’ve been days of protests and road blockades in the western fishing town of Chilaw, where larger boats depend on diesel whose price has jumped by 36% and smaller ones on kerosene which is now 49% more expensive.
About 5,000 people, including women and children, went on a protest march.
A resident told the BBC the security forces opened fire, killing a 38-year-old fisherman and wounding three or four others.
The police confirmed there was a gunfire death, saying it happened after the earlier use of teargas against crowds who they said had damaged some public buildings.
Stand off
Reports from the area say 15,000 people are in a standoff with the police and army on the beach and Catholic priests are trying to ease tensions.
Meanwhile the police have used teargas and water cannon against a demonstration in the capital against the fuel price rises.
The government says it was forced to make the hikes because of rising world oil prices.
Bus fares have gone up by 20% and steep new surcharges in the price of domestic electricity have been announced.
Unions representing some of the poorest people in Sri Lanka – tea-pickers – say they are being hit especially hard by the hikes as most use kerosene at home.

EU to push for UN probe


 Wednesday, February 15, 2012




The European Parliament has decided to push for a UN commission of inquiry into the crimes committed in Sri Lanka during the war.
A resolution agreed upon by the European Parliament this week on its position at the next UN Human Rights Council session includes its stand on Sri Lanka.
On Sri Lanka, the European Parliament said it will stress on the need to further support efforts to strengthen the accountability process in Sri Lanka and continue to call for the establishment of a UN commission of inquiry into all crimes committed, as recommended by the UN Secretary General’s Panel of Experts on Sri Lanka.
The EU will also invite the Sri Lankan Government to send an invitation to the UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression.
The UN Human Rights Council will convene in Geneva at the end of this month. The US has already said it will support a resolution on Sri Lanka. (ER)

“President has put me in difficulty” – Minister GL

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

External Affairs Minister Prof. G.L. Peiris says that he has lost respect amongst the international community due to the varying tasks assigned to him by the President.
He has made this comment with several of his most trusted friends during a dinner at a Muslim businessman’s house.
A chief manager of a well known Singapore company had also attended the dinner.
The Minister has spoken at length about the current situation of the country and what could transpire in his meeting with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. He has said that he was faced with a great difficulty in responding to Clinton about the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) report since the recommendations have not been implemented. He has noted that on a previous visit to the US to meet Hillary, he had assured the implementation of the LLRC recommendations following a directive by the President to make such a statement.
A disgruntled minister has said that apart from the US, assurances given by him to India and the European countries following Presidential directives have all not yet been implemented.
Minister Peiris has said that Ministers Champika Ranawaka, Wimal Weerawansa and Basil Rajapaksa also intervened in Ministry affairs and that the External Affairs Ministry was now in a mess.
He has added that the External Affairs Ministry staff was split and that the staff members acted in support of various countries while the External Affairs Ministry Secretary was partial to the Chinese.

Govt. is frightened of the people: JVP

WEDNESDAY, 15 FEBRUARY 2012 
JVP parliamentarian Sunil Handunneththi is reported to have suffered minor injuries during the skirmish at the demonstration held in Maligawatta today, MP Vijitha Herath said. 

"A tear gas bullet hit his head during the police assault on us. This is a government that is frightened of the people and they use the police to suppress the voice of the people. First they murdered Roshen Chanaka, then today they murdered a fishermen in Chilaw after yesterdays protests, today they didn't let us protest peacefully, they are doing this because they are afraid of the people," he said.

The MP further went on to point out that the JVP condemns the murder of the fisherman and the attack on today's protest. "We condemn in the strongest possible terms the murder of an innocent fisherman and the police brutality used by the state on us," he said. (Hafeel Farisz)

Sri Lanka tries to trick the international community before the next UNHRC session in Geneva

Wednesday, 15 February 2012 

The Sri Lanka President has repeatedly said that his soldiers under his command went to war with gun in one hand and human rights law book in the other. He also claimed that the operation was a humanitarian operation and there had not been even a single civilian casualty.
He also challenged the authenticity of the Channel 4 documentary ‘Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields’ that showed summary execution of people with hands tied to their back by soldiers and some soldiers handling naked bodies of women that may have been sexually assaulted. One soldier claimed on the film that one naked body being thrown into a lorry was not really dead and another one says that this one (dead naked body) looks beautiful.
The documentary claimed that these were Sri Lankan soldiers. Sri Lankan soldiers were and still are under the command of His Excellency the President of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa. The Defence Secretary is Mahinda Rajapaksa’s brother Nandasena (Gotabhaya) Rajapaksa. Nandasena Rajapaksa in a BBC interview said ‘I am telling you we will hang him’. He was referring to Sarath Fonseka, the Army Chief who is in jail now. Sarath Fonseka has implicated Nandasena Rajapaksa in the white flag killings.
Now under international pressure President Mahinda Rajapaksa has agreed to set up a court of inquiry by the army. In other words the army investigating itself. This is like asking Saddam Hussein, Gaddafi or Assad to investigate their own crimes. Can we ask the Norwegian serial killer Breivik to investigate his own killings?
It will be interesting to see the response of Obama administration and the British government. One must remember what President Obama said during his election campaign before he became President. He said ‘When genocide is happening somewhere in the world and we stand idly by that diminishes us’.
With Presidential elections coming up in the US where Obama stands to win, it is anticipated that he would take firm action against Sri Lanka.
The British Foreign Minister Alistair Burt said not so long ago that if ‘accountability’ is not dealt with sufficiently in Sri Lanka ALL OPTIONS ARE OPEN TO THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT.
The expert panel appointed by the Secretary General of the UN Ban Ki Moon has claimed that more than 40,000 people may have been killed during the final phase of the war. The government of Sri Lanka is accused of aerial bombardment of safe zones (set up by the government) and killing thousands of civilians including women, children, disabled and the elderly. The government of Sri Lanka is also accused of bombing hospitals and shooting people who came out of the war zone with white flags. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) are accused of using civilians as human shield.
Many human rights organisations have claimed that Tamil women were raped by Sri Lankan soldiers during and after the war.
It will be interesting to see the contents of the book on human rights that the President of Sri Lanka gave his soldiers to hold in one hand whilst carrying a gun on the other.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Bangladesh PR Tells ICP Silva "Not Acceptable" As UN Adviser, He, India & Pakistan Have Told Sri Lanka to "Fix It"

Inner City Press
By Matthew Russell Lee, Exclusive
UNITED NATIONS, February 13 -- The Sri Lankan government's first response to the more than two weeks of questions by Inner City Press about the appointment as a UN "Senior Adviser on Peacekeeping Operations" of General Shavendra Silva, whose Division 58 is repeatedly named in connection with war crimes in Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's Panel of Experts report, was to sent a letter of complaint to Inner City Press.
  The Sri Lanka mission also sent copies to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's spokesman as well as to some in the UN press corps.

  Then, after UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay told Inner City Press on February 13 she had expressed her "concern" about Silva to Ban, the Sri Lankan mission issued a statement -- not to Inner City Press -- calling the concerns "unethical," and got it reported.

  But the concerns about Silva, Inner City Press has exclusively learned, extend to large Asian peacekeeping countries as well, and the Sri Lankan mission knows this, even as it sends out its missives .

  Bangladesh' Permanent Representative Abulkalam Abdul Momen exclusively told Inner City Press, regarding Sri Lanka slipping in Silva as the Asian Group's representative on the Senior Advisory Group on Peacekeeping Operations, "we were surprised they sent a controversial participant... it's not fair."

  Adding that Silva "individually is not acceptable," Abulkalam Abdul Momen told Inner City Press, "I, India and Pakistan, we have requested Sri Lanka to fix it up."

  So even as Sri Lanka first attacked Inner City Press for calling Silva inappropriate as a UN adviser, then called Pillay "unethical," the Sri Lankan mission knew that three large Asian countries were saying Silva is "not acceptable" and that it must be "fixed."
(c) UN Photo
Bangladesh PR 
Abulkalam Abdul Momen, Silva "fix" not yet shown

   Other sources say Sri Lanka has been seeking commitments not to push for accountability at the Human Rights Council in Geneva in exchange for switching Silva for Palitha Kohona, who also figures in the UN Panel of Experts report in connection with the White Flag murders of surrendees, in which Ban Ki-moon's own chief of staff Vijay Nambiar also played a role.

   But with this Asian opposition known, does Sri Lanka's "leverage" decrease? Watch this site.

Footnotes: India and Pakistan are on the Security Council, which is on a trip this week to Haiti. India's Deputy Permanent Representative has headed back to India to prepare for a visit by the President of the General Assembly.
   Inner City Press has repeated ask Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky to describe anything Ban or his team was doing about Silva as an adviser, and nothing has been said. So if and when this "fix" is made, it will be no-thanks to Ban Ki-moon.

Independence is only meaningful if all people able to live free of fear and suspicion

LANKA Standard

Rt Revd Kumara Illangasinghe | Published on February 14, 2012
Nelson Mandela

“Freedom of expression and the right to information is extremely restricted as increasingly there are controls on dissent and information channels are blocked. Providing authentic information regarding the dead and those who have disappeared, to their relatives, continues to be an urgent humanitarian need. There is a misrepresentation of such action, as not taken in the interest of national security and it is unfortunate that in many occasions, those who speak the truth, probably contrary to the official position are branded as national traitors. This also links with the operation of para-military groups, either with or without the knowledge of those responsible for security of our country. It is shameful to observe that they appear to be ignorant of these groups. Urgent remedial action is needed in this regard to protect the freedom of our armless and probably defenseless people.”

In our reflections last year on the commemoration of independance annual letter. A friend sent it on to us. hence we emphasised with much concern that the sixty third commemoration of our Independence can be meaningful only by creating an environment where all people alike will be able to live without fear or suspicion and without any hesitation, they will have to feel and believe that they are a valuable and a useful part of this country.     Full Story>>>

Press Conference by Under Secretary Maria Otero and Assistant Secretary Robert O. Blake, Jr. in Colombo