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, April 7, 2012

TNA rubbishes govt allegations on US resolution Says state should take the blame for not solving ethnic question

 
By Ravi Ladduwahetty

The Tamil National Alliance yesterday rejected the recent claim made by the government that it (the TNA) instigated the United States Government to bring in the resolution against Sri Lanka on war crimes and other human rights violations at the just concluded United Nations Human Rights Commission deliberations last month."It is foolish on the part of the government to make frivolous allegations against the TNA that we instigated the US government to bring in the resolution against Sri Lanka for alleged human rights violations when it is very well aware of what it has done," TNA Spokesman and Jaffna District MP Suresh Premachandran told The Island last night.

He also said that that the government should take full responsibility for the US resolution which, he said, was its own doing and implored the government to solve the ethnic question at its earliest.

Premachandran stressed that the government would be continuing to attract the attention of the international community so long as it refused to bring in solutions to the ethnic questions.

The state would not have been in this mess had it listed to the TNA and did all what we wanted to solve the issues at hand, he said.

Premachandran also said that three years had passed since the LTTE was annihilated but the government did nothing to solve the ethnic issue. "The government thought that the war was over and therefore, everything was over which was not the case," he said.



Lessons to learn from Geneva

Return to frontpageApril 7, 2012
NIRUPAMA SUBRAMANIAN
Had Sri Lanka taken steps to implement the 13th amendment, India may never have associated itself with the UNHCR resolution.

   As Sri Lanka mulls over last month's United Nations Human Rights Council resolution, it may look back with nostalgia at its 2009 triumph at Geneva. Then, barely a week after its victory over the LTTE, a group of western countries wanted a resolution passed against Sri Lanka for the civilian deaths and other alleged rights violations by the army during the last stages of the operation. With the blood on the battlefield not still dry, Sri Lanka managed to snatch victory from the jaws of diplomatic defeat, with a resolution that praised the government for its humane handling of civilians and asserted faith in its abilities to bring about reconciliation.
But few remember that the resolution contained an important line relating to a commitment by President Mahinda Rajapaksa. The line, in the preamble to the text, is surprising in its detail:“Welcoming also the recent reassurance given by the President of Sri Lanka that he does not regard a military solution as a final solution, as well as his commitment to a political solution with implementation of the thirteenth amendment to bring about lasting peace and reconciliation in Sri Lanka”.      Full Story>>>

Government orders probe

April 7, 2012 | 12:14 pm | by Easwaran Rutnam

The Sunday LeaderThe government has ordered an investigation into the incident in Batticaloa where statues of Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi and Britain’s Robert Baden-Powell had been vandalized.
A statement by the External Affairs Ministry today said that the Inspector General of Police has been instructed to carryout an immediate and thorough investigation into these incidents to identify motives and culprits behind these acts of vandalism.
“It has been brought to the notice of the Ministry of External Affairs that several important statues in the Batticaloa town have been vandalized yesterday. Inspector General of Police has been instructed to carryout an immediate and thorough investigation into these incidents to identify motives and culprits behind these acts of vandalism,” the External Affairs Ministry said.
Attackers beheaded the statues of Gandhi and Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scout movement.
There was no claim of responsibility for the destruction.
The police said two other statues of local figures had also been destroyed in what appeared to have been a coordinated attack carried out overnight in Batticaloa.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Gandhi statue vandalized

BBCSinhala.com

 Founder scout movement Lord Robert Baden Powell
Statue of Lord Robert Baden Powell

The statue of the founder of the scout movement Lord Robert Baden Powell was vandalised while 29th Asia Pacific Region (APR) Scout Jamboree and the centenary celebrations of Sri Lanka scouting was held in Dambulla.
The statue of Mahatma Gandhi also became a victim of apparently an organised campaign of vandalism carried out early hours of Friday. Both statues were decapitated.
Statue of Mahatma Gandhi
Statue of Mahatma Gandhi

Two other statues that of Tamil Hindu Social reformer, Swami Vipulananthar and the poet Palavarmani Periyathambipillai have also been vandalized.

50 years
The statue of Mahathma Ghandhi erected over 50 years ago in honour of the pre-eminent political and ideological leader of India during the Indian independence movement.
Swami Vipulanandar

The President of the Gandhian Movement in Batticaloa, Dr. A. Selvendran told BBC Sandeshaya that the statue was intact even during the war and it is sad that it happened when there is peace in the area.
Jamboree in Dambulla
“This probably may be an attempt to breach the peace,” he exclaimed.
 Palavarmani Periyathambipillai
Palavarmani Periyathambipillai

Vivekanandan Pradeepan, the Commissioner of the Scout Movement in the Batticloa District talking to Sandeshaya from Dambulla where 29th Asia Pacific Region (APR) Scout Jamboree and the centenary celebrations of Sri Lanka scouting being held said that it is painful to hear that the statue of the father of the scout movement was vandalised while the jamboree celebrtions were taking place.
The Scout Jamboree held in Dambulla was inaugurated by President Mahinda Rajapaksha on the 1st of April.

MaRa seeks Chandrika’s power capturing mode after going for snap election

(Lanka-e-News-06.April.2012, 2.00PM) Since the Rajapakse regime is currently headed for a holocaust from an international standpoint due to its fiscal bungling and in the international political scene, it is contemplating holding a snap general election as a way out of this abysmal mess it has driven itself into , according to reports reaching Lanka e news.

Because the regime cannot expect under any circumstances currently to win the elections , like how ex President Chandrika Kumaranatunge did , is planning to secure the assistance of the opposition to bail itself out.

The advisors of the regime chief had counseled him to allow the opposition to win a hard fought elections ,and thereafter when the grave international pressures had eased and issues resolved , following in the lines of Chandrika , take back the reign after two years using his executive powers.

A worthless brat of the shameless unscrupulous sordid stooge brigade of the Rajapakse regime who thinks and poses as a senior and ‘far sighted’, is running wild in all directions like a rat towards achieving this end ,reports say.
As a first exercise , it has sought to appoint a national Govt. ; but, the response from the opposition had been most unfavorable, and its own Basil Rajapakse who is the regime’s pivot in its campaigns has also shown an antagonistic response, it is learnt.

When a leader of a remote province came and met the President recently , the latter had told him to get ready for elections. But ‘don’t think of winning’, the President had told him.

The regime had organized a series of meetings at district level in connection with the prevailing dire situation in the country .The first meeting of this series was held last Sunday at the Bogambara ground , Kandy .
But only a poor crowd of less than about 5000 had attended it. If the group of 2000 from Dambulla of Janaka Bandara Tennekoon had not arrived at the venue , the meeting would have been a disastrous and dismal failure. As the first meeting itself of the series showed signs of flop ,the Govt. party is now considering whether the remaining 8 meetings shall be held or not. 

The plan of the Govt. is to hold snap elections and Ranil Wickremesinghe shall be installed in power , while President is to remain in his position ; and in the same way as Chandrika capture back power after two years by dissolving Parliament . If the Govt. is seeking to give effect to this ‘film story’ again , the opposition too is making preparations to give effect to even a longer ‘film reel’ to match that of the Govt. , reports say.

WikiLeaks: Basil Conceded Pre-Election Contacts With The LTTE

By Colombo Telegraph –
Namal Rajapaksa with Emil Kanthan (Center)
Colombo Telegraph


“Basil Rajapaksa conceded to Ambassador (ref B) that the pre-election contacts with the LTTE had taken place. It is not yet established that money changed hands in these meetings or what Kanthan may have done subsequently with the funds.” the US Embassy informed Washington.
The ambassador wrote “However, the sensitivity of the Rajapaksas to the allegations is understandable. It is a historical fact that threats by the Tamil Tigers suppressed the Tamil vote not just in the areas they control, but in all districts of the Northeast. Even the suggestion of a deal with the Tigers is anathema to many of the president’s supporters, especially the JVP, parts of which have begun to distance themselves from the Rajapaksas (ref C). It still seems unlikely to us that the GSL can successfully prosecute Alles; the collateral damage to Basil and the other figures in the case would be enormous. Already, the heavy-handed efforts to neutralize Alles, former Foreign Minister Samaraweera and his understudy, Sooriyarachchi, have come at a high political cost and undermined the stability of the government. Alles’ release on bail may be a sign that the parties are again trying to settle their differences. If the new attempt is successful, the story will likely disappear. That said, he is hardly in the clear. Under the emergency regulations passed in December 2006, Alles could be detained again and held on suspicion by successive detention orders.”The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database which details the secret agreement with the Tamil Tigers to suppress Tamil votes in the 2005 Presidential election. The cable was written on June 14, 2007 by the US Ambassador to Colombo, Robert O. Blake.
Related news to this cable;
Read the cable below for further details;

Uncle charging 10% and nephew competing with 12 ½%

by A Special Corespondent in Colombo

( April 05, 2012, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian)The assassinated Sunday Leader editor Lasantha Wickramatunga went to the great length to investigate the illegal 10% commission charging by the President’s brother Basil Rajapakse in awarding contracts. Just before Lasantha’s murder, it was revealed that some he undertook an investigation to find startling evidence of Basil taking big commissions when awarding contracts. Before the editor could put the pen on the paper, he was bumped off in the broad day light in Colombo.

With the death of Lasantha the 10% commission business of Basil has been swept under the carpet due to dumfounded silence maintained by the investigative journalism in Sri Lanka. Lasantha’s death numbed the media altogether and Basil’s commission spree went on without questions being asked by anyone.

According to information received by Sri Lanka Guardian, the President’s son and Basil’s nephew Namal Rajapakse has entered the commission taking market of the Rajapakse family. He is said to be charging 12 ½ % on land deals based on project or land value given for development work. Without commission, there is no land deals with Namal Rajapakse says the source.

However, further investigations revealed few land deals have been undertaken free of commission to project a clean image of Namal Rajapakse.


Now criminal white Van trails behind artistes

(Lanka-e-News-06.April.2012, 2.00PM) Two of Sri Lanka’s popular artistes have been subjected to death threats , according to reports reaching Lanka e news.

One of them who received threats is an artiste who had participated in a number of electronic media programs and is popular for being candidly critical of the political situation in the country. He had received a number of death threats by phone over the last several days. The caller’s number however could not be identified. The murderous callers have warned him against taking part in the programs , and that if he does not desist , he would have to face the white Van and its criminals.

The other artiste under death threat is , a son of a doyen (a senior artiste ) in the same field. He is employed in a State media Institution. When the regime had asked the senior artiste to create a drama on ‘nelum pokuna’ (lotus pond) - ( a white elephant of a drama ), he had replied that if only the present ‘army administration’ is eliminated , he could produce the requested drama .The regime which was provoked and enraged over this , had started maneuvering to axe this artiste , and after ‘pumping’ money towards the other artistes, had pretended that its ‘lotus pond’ project is a success. Thereafter , the criminal white Van had been sent by the Idi Mahin regime to trail behind the son of this senior artiste.

It is learnt that these two artistes are now keeping a low profile after getting security detail to protect themselves.
May we recall , when the Idi Mahin brutal murderous regime was abducting the Tamils in its infamous criminal white van and when the victims went missing , the artistes remained silent calling the victims , ‘they are tigers’. Subsequently when the Muslims were abducted , they said , ‘those thambys are being abducted because they must have supported the Tigers’ and kept quiet. Thereafter when ‘criminals’ were abducted , they alleged ,’ those are heroin peddlers’, and remained quiet . When the media personnel were abducted and they were caused to disappear , they dismissed it saying ‘ those are the media which wrote in support of the NGOs’. Even when attempts were publicly made to abduct the SLFP Mayor of the Govt. itself elected on people’s votes at local polls , they ignored it saying , ‘after all , he was not abducted , hence why worry’. Now , the white Van has started coming after the very artistes who didn’t care two hoots when the white van was abducting others. Now , are the artistes going to say , ‘nothing to worry they are after only those two artistes, not us’? . Are the religious leaders , the intelligentsia and the law abiding citizens also going to stand idle and watch all these heinous crimes being committed in their own midst before their own eyes with complete impunity , and continue saying selfishly,'after all when we are safe , why worry’.

French push to pursue probe


FRIDAY, 06 APRIL 2012

The French Embassy has taken fresh diplomatic initiatives  in pursuing the case regarding the killing of 17 workers attached to the French branch of the international aid agency called ‘Action against Hunger’ in August, 2006 in Muttur, informed sources said.

The Daily Mirror learns that French Ambassador Ms. Christine Robichon met the Attorney General to discuss the present status of investigations despite the lapse of six years since the incident happened.

These aid workers were killed during the initial stage of the war after the closure of Mavil Aru sluice gates by the LTTE. The Ambassador has reportedly asked numerous questions from the Department as to what happened to the investigations. 

Earlier, former Attorney General Mohan Peiris assured the international community during an interactive session with representatives of countries interested in the Sri Lanka issue in Geneva in February that the cases into the killing of five students in Trincomalee and 17 aid workers in Mutur would be reopened. 

The Amnesty International (AI) was particularly interested to know as to what happened to the investigations. The AI also asked why the report of the presidential commission appointed to look into this case was not publicized.  

The 17 workers were found dead in their aid agency office on August 6, 2006 in Muttur at a time when pitched battles were fought between the military and the LTTE.  In addition to the AI, representatives of the Tamil diaspora have also raised the issue in Geneva during side events.  (Kelum Bandara)

Gandhi statue vandalised in Sri Lanka

An Indian labourer cleans a statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Bhubaneswar in 2010. Statues of Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi and Britain's Robert Baden-Powell have been vandalised in Sri Lanka amid an anti-Indian and anti-Western campaign on the island, police said Friday

An Indian labourer cleans a statue of 
Mahatma Gandhi in Bhubaneswar in
 2010. Statues …

YAHOO! NEWSAFP
Statues of Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi and Britain's Robert Baden-Powell have been vandalised in Sri Lanka amid an anti-Indian and anti-Western campaign on the island, police said Friday.
Attackers beheaded the statues of Gandhi and Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scout movement, in the town of Batticaloa, 300 kilometres (187 miles) east of Colombo by road, a police spokesman said.
"We have launched an investigation and deployed intelligence units to get at the vandals," police spokesman Ajith Rohana told AFP. "We do not have any suspects at the moment."
There was no claim of responsibility for the destruction.
Rohana said two other statues of local figures had also been destroyed in what appeared to have been a coordinated attack carried out overnight in Batticaloa, an area where there is a heavy security presence.
Anti-Western graffiti appeared in many parts of the country after the UN human rights council last month adopted a US-led resolution urging Sri Lanka to probe alleged war crimes committed by its troops.
Demonstrations denouncing the United States and its allies, backed by senior figures in the cabinet, were also held across the country.
Neighbouring India, which had previously supported Sri Lanka, sided with the West in voting for the resolution. Several local media have criticised India after the UNHRC vote.
Human rights groups say that up to 40,000 civilians were killed in the final months of Sri Lanka's ethnic war, which ended in May 2009, but the government has insisted that none was killed by its troops.
The UN estimates that up to 100,000 people were killed in the conflict between 1972 and 2009.


Rapp submits report on Sri Lanka


April 5, 2012 | 6:31 pm | by Easwaran Rutnam  

The US State Department Office of Global Criminal Justice (GCJ), formerly the Office of War Crimes Issues (WCI), led by Ambassador-at-Large Stephen Rapp, has submitted a report on Sri Lanka to the U.S Congress.
The Sunday LeaderRapp, who visited Sri Lanka in February this year, has noted in the report efforts taken by the Sri Lankan government and the international community to investigate and hold accountable violators of international humanitarian and human rights law.
The report draws attention to open questions regarding allegations of violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights law (IHRL) but it is not meant to be a legal determination confirming any of those allegations, Stephen Rapp’s office said.
In the report the Office of Global Criminal Justice notes that the LLRC Report fails to critically analyze or investigate the “white flag” incident, in which high level LTTE leaders were allegedly shot despite assurances from the GSL that they could safely surrender.
The Department of State does not take a position regarding the allegations concerning the “white flag” allegations but notes that the discrepancy between the report of the UN Panel of Experts and the LLRC reports merits further investigation.


Statues vandalized in Batti


A set of statues including that of Mahathma Ghandhi and the memorial statue erected in honour of the Leader of the world scout movement Lord Baden Powell were vandalized early this morning. Pictures show the statues that were vandalized by an unidentified group. Pix by M. Sukri 






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Some thoughts on the Buddha and his teaching

May 16, 2011, 12:00 pm 
article_image
by 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. The word Buddha is a title, and not a personal name. The personal name of the Buddha is Siddhartha Gotama. But what exactly is the meaning of the title Buddha? Both in Pali and Sanskrit the term Buddha means "one who is awakened." We should understand the term "awakened", not in a literal sense, but in an idiomatic sense. It means the one who is awakened from the slumber of ignorance, one who is awakened from the slumber of delusion. The term Buddha also means the one who is enlightened, the one who is enlightened to the nature of actuality. This means that the Buddha had gained an immediate vision, an immediate insight into the nature of things as they actually are. This is the highest wisdom that leads to complete emancipation from all forms of conditioned experience. If the Buddha is the Enlightened One, the religion he has founded can rightly be described as the Religion of Enlightenment.

Full Story>>>

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Major General de Silva to return


April 5, 2012 | 10:42 pm | by Easwaran Rutnam

The Sunday Leader

Major General Prasanna de Silva – the defence adviser at the Sri Lanka high commission in London – is to return to Sri Lanka soon, the Guardian newspaper reported.
This comes as an organisation representing the Tamil diaspora was set to launch legal action against the British Foreign Office over its failure to confront Major General de Silva over allegations of being involved in alleged war crimes.
The Global Tamil Forum (GTF) alleges that Silva was involved in systematic attacks on Tamil civilians between January and May 2009 when he was a senior commander in the Sri Lankan army.
It decided to press for a judicial review of the FCO’s actions after the British foreign secretary, William Hague, refused to declare Silva persona non grata and strip him of his diplomatic immunity so he could be questioned over the allegations. Scotland Yard has been handed a dossier on the allegations facing Silva but has refused to comment further on the matter.
It has emerged in the last few days that Silva is soon to return to Sri Lanka, raising fears that he may avoid questioning. The FCO’s legal advisers have also written to the GTF’s solicitors, Birnberg, Peirce and Partners, informing them there will be a two-week delay in dealing with the case because of the Easter recess.
A spokesman for the Sri Lankan government told the Guardian on Wednesday night that Silva was going home because his 18-month term as defence adviser was almost up, adding: “The claim of a lawsuit by the GTF has nothing to do with this routine transfer matter and it appears to be yet another invidious attempt to embarrass both Sri Lankan and British governments and a continuation of GTF’s history of attempting to gain misplaced publicity mileage for events it has nothing to do with.”
The Sri Lankan high commission has previously described allegations against Silva as “highly spurious and uncorroborated” and accused British media of seeking “entirely falsely, to implicate members of the Sri Lankan government and senior military figures” in such acts.
The GTF – which points out that the dossier in the hands of the Metropolitan police has also been in the possession of the FCO since late January – worries that Silva will have left the UK by the time action is taken.
“All we are seeking is justice for the hundreds of thousands of innocent people who allegedly perished at the hands of the likes of Prasanna de Silva and others,” said a spokesman. “Our kind request to the secretary of state is to let the legal process decide whether Maj Gen Silva is guilty or not guilty.”
The GTF, he added, has “complete faith in the British justice system”.
The Foreign Office confirmed it had received a dossier on Silva in January and had advised the NGOs who compiled it – the Society for Threatened Peoples, Trial and the European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights – to pass “any credible evidence” on to the Met.
“We also looked closely at the dossier ourselves,” said an FCO spokesman. “However, while we were assessing this evidence, we were notified that Silva was planning to move on soon.” The spokesman said that while the British government takes all such allegations very seriously, he was unable to comment on the legal action brought by the GTF.
Siobhain McDonagh, the Labour MP for Mitcham and Morden and vice-chair of the all-party parliamentary group for Tamils, described the FCO’s failure to act sooner on the dossier as “unfathomable”.
“It does seem extraordinary [for the FCO] to take no action and just rely upon the Sri Lankan government to withdraw him,” she said. “Given the evidence and that the government saw the dossier from the NGOs, why on earth did they take no action?”
The British government’s behaviour, she added, would send an unfortunate message about the UK’s commitment to human rights. “If you get a reputation for taking people who there are serious allegations of war crimes against, do other countries do the same thing?” she said.
“Do we want people who have those allegations against them here? Do we want people to think that we’re an easy or a soft option?”
Fred Carver, the campaign director of the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice, said he could not believe that the British government had accepted Silva’s diplomatic accreditation in the first place.
“Any intern equipped with Google and a working mouse could have determined that there were credible allegations against Silva,” he said.
“Now they know what they should have previously suspected and investigated, they should not hesitate to revoke it before it is too late. If they do nothing then Silva’s unhindered return will be rightly interpreted as signifying that Britain is soft on war crimes suspects.”