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

Sunday, May 27, 2012


   Sunday, May 27
Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Ashok K Kantha has visited the stronghold of former Tamil Tigers in the eastern province to understand the ground situation there and review the ongoing rehabilitation work undertaken by New Delhi.
"High Commissioner reviewed projects of Indian assistance currently being undertaken in the province. He also held wide ranging discussions with various stakeholders to assess the impact of these projects on the ground and understand local priorities and requirements in order to further expand India’s development assistance," said a statement released by the High Commission here.
The High Commissioner inaugurated a Vocational Training Centre set up with Indian assistance of 76 million Lankan rupees in the Batticaloa district. He also met political, religious, military and civil society leaders in the region.
Another such centre was commissioned at a cost of 250 million Lankan rupees also in Batticaloa during the visit of the Indian parliamentary delegation in April.
Kantha also discussed implementation of the Housing Project, which would involve construction of about 4,000 houses in the eastern province, with various stakeholders, including potential beneficiary communities.
"The objective of the visit to the Eastern Province was to understand the ground situation in the Province and explore opportunities to further develop economic, cultural and People-to-people links with that part of Sri Lanka", the statement said.

Green light from Sri Lanka to Naveen Pillai


logoSATURDAY, 26 MAY 2012

The USA has stated that the Sri Lankan delegation led by the Minister of Foreign Affairs G.L. Peiris on an official visit to the USA has expressed its willingness to host UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navaneetham Pillai in Sri Lanka.
The USA has told G.L. Peiris and the delegation that Sri Lanka should approve Ms. Pillai’s visit to Sri Lanka. It is also stated that Sri Lanka should work closely with the UNO in human rights matters.
The delegation has been told at the US State Department that a committee should be appointed to investigate genuine human rights matters before UN High Commissioner for Human Rights arrives in Sri Lanka. They have also emphasized that Sri Lanka should cooperate with the UNHCR regarding the resolution adopted in Geneva in March.

By Bandula Sirimanna
The latest countrywide census conducted by the Department of Census and Statistics has placed Sri Lanka's population at 20.2 million, official sources said yesterday. According to the headcount, 14.9 million are Sinhala. Around 220,000 persons add to the total population of Sri Lanka annually and by 2041 the total population of Sri Lanka will be around 24 million, the census, which was the first to be conducted islandwide in 30 years, showed.
The population of the north is 997,754 of which 934,392 are Tamils. There are only 21,860 Sinhala and 32,659 Muslims in the five districts of the Northern Province. The census revealed that out of the total Muslim population of more than 1.5 million, more than one-third live in the north and east. The majority live in the east, where they constitute about a third of the population, which has roughly an equal proportion of Sinhala, Muslims and Tamils, officials said.
The Department has finalized the first report on preliminary data of the islandwide census and it will be handed over to President Mahinda Rajapaksa soon, Director General D.B.P. Suranjana Vidyaratne told the Sunday Times. Details of the report would be made public after the report was submitted to the President.
The census results would be released in three stages. A general figure on the country's population and data about households would be released first and other information would follow. Data related to internet usage and migration would be released in the third and final stage, according to Additional Director General D.C.A. Gunawardena.
He said that the National ID number, reason for migration, professional and vocational qualifications and computer literacy were new features in the 2011 census.

Tyrants And The Queen: She Is Out Of Touch With The Humanitarian Values


May 26, 2012

Uvindu Kurukulasuriya
Colombo TelegraphThe Queen has come under criticism for inviting tyrants to celebrate her Diamond Jubilee. Last week it was about Middle Eastern monarchs. Swazilanders and Bahrainians joined human rights campaigners in a protest on Friday 18, May outside Buckingham Palace against the invitations to royal dictators from around the world to the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee dinner.
Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell has condemned the Queen’s decision to invite “dictator monarchs” to her Diamond Jubilee celebrations this. She will host the royal autocrats for lunch at Windsor Castle and for dinner at Buckingham Palace.
“It is outrageous that the Queen has invited royal tyrants to celebrate her Diamond Jubilee. She should not host the monarchs of countries such as Brunei, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Swaziland and United Arab Emirates. All of them preside over regimes that abuse human rights,” said Peter Tatchell, Director of the human rights campaign group, the Peter Tatchell Foundation.
“Inviting blood-stained despots brings shame to our monarchy and tarnishes the Diamond Jubilee celebrations. It is a kick in the teeth to pro-democracy campaigners and political prisoners in these totalitarian royal regimes. The invitations should be withdrawn immediately, as a mark of respect for those who have been murdered, arrested, jailed and tortured,” he added.    
 Read More
No way to celebrate a Jubliee
Sunday, 27 May 2012
This year, Queen Elizabeth II will celebrate her diamond jubilee, to mark sixty years as monarch and head of the commonwealth. The celebrations will be long, grand, and varied, and one of the flagship events will be a private luncheon in London on the 6th of June with the Prime Minister, the Foreign Secretary ... and a war criminal.
The President of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa, a man against whom the UN have found credible allegations of responsibility for the murder of 40,000 civilians, and who leads a government that oversaw the disappearance of 32 people this March alone, will join the Queen and other heads of state at the taxpayer-funded meal.
This is no way to celebrate a jubilee.
The Government of Sri Lanka were rightly taken to task by the UN Human Rights Council, both for their failure to address accountability for past crimes, and their continued use of torture and oppression. They responded in typically belligerent fashion by redoubling their attacks on independent journalists and human rights defenders. It is therefore absolutely vital that at this key moment the international community keep the pressure on. This is not the moment to treat the President of Sri Lanka to pomp and pageantry -- nor should the Queen be forced to spend her jubilee posing for photos with a man who should be indicted for mass murder.
You can help make sure this doesn't happen.
The British Royal Family has recently introduced ways for you to give them your opinions. We can and should use these channels to tell them that the Queen should be celebrating her jubilee in the company of war criminals. On your right you will see links to the mechanisms that the Royal Household has set up to send a message to the Queen -- please use it to register your disgust at President Mahinda's presence.
The Royal Household is very sensitive to negative publicity around the jubilee. There is a good chance that this will be successful but, even if he does come, it is important that we register our strong objection. At least President Mahinda will not be able to portray his visit as a public relations triumph. The jubilee should not be about torture and mass murder. Please send the Queen that message today.



Sri Lankan Soldiers Lack Counselling



By Dinouk Colombage
The longevity of the Sri Lankan war has most definitely affected thesoldiers mentally.



As number of murder cases involving soldiers increase Sowmiya Ramanayaka, contributing psychologist lecturer at the Australian Defence Force Academy, urged the authorities to pursue counselling programs for all the soldiers who had been involved in the war.
Ramanayaka told The Sunday Leader that “having worked with soldiers who have fought in wars, I have seen first-hand the psychological stress they suffer.” Ramanayaka, who has worked with Australian soldiers upon their return from Afghanistan, explained that the longevity of the Sri Lankan war has most definitely affected the soldiers mentally.

 

War-orphaned minor sold as sex slave to Saudi looking for virgins

By Leon Berenger in Hikkaduwa  

Sunday May 27, 2012
 

Hikkaduwa: Tourist destination where the sordid incident occurred. Pix by Saman Kariywasam
She was an unsuspecting 16-year-old girl who found herself forced into an air-conditioned room in a luxury tourist resort in Hikkaduwa, and allegedly repeatedly raped by a 27-year-old Saudi Arabian businessman.
Unable to bear the agony of her ordeal, she wept as she related her story to a Police team that blew the lid off a racket not only in prostitution but also human smuggling. The story unfolded after the Police acting on a tip-off, stormed the hotel and arrested two Saudi nationals and a local woman resident of Maradana, and rescued the 16-year-old girl.

The young girl’s mother and other family members in Batticaloa
Another young Thai girl aged 20, was also found to be in the group, but was released as it was revealed that she was a mere companion of the other Saudi national. The girl, who cannot be named owing to her age - 16 years and 7 months - had, on the previous night, been allegedly repeatedly raped by the 27-year-old Saudi national, after he had paid a huge sum of money to a local human trafficker for a virgin female sex slave.
Investigations reveal that the trail began from Batticaloa, where the girl was procured for Rs. 200,000 by an agent identified only as Prakash, currently evading arrest. The money, to be handed over to the girl’s mother, a resident of Batticaloa District, never reached her, the girl was later to tell police.
Read more..



Sri Lanka’s only cargo ship detained in S. Africa for not paying the crew


logoSUNDAY, 27 MAY 2012 

‘Lanka Mahapola’, the only cargo ship belonging to Sri Lanka has been detained in Durban Port in South Africa on a court order. The vessel was detained on 17th May on a directive from a court in South Africa following written complaints by members of the crew stating they had not received wages for two months and conditions on the ship were poor.
The crew consists of 26 members of which 24 are Sri Lankans. The vessel owned by the Ceylon Shipping Corporation had been leased out to a private company, Triple. S. Shipping, which was responsible for the crew and the cargo on board.
According to sources the International Transport workers Federation (ITF) was looking after the interests of the crew members. Earlier too Lanka Mahapola was stuck in a Sudan Port during November last year with reports that those onboard were in distress with food, water, fuel and other basic items reaching rock bottom. The vessel had been refused entry into the port since the shipping company was in the red regarding port dues, such as bunkering, tug and other charges.

Friday, May 25, 2012


Sri Lanka War Crimes-Genocide With West Complicity

May 25, 2012
Ron Ridenour
Colombo TelegraphThe US-UK axis is quite adroit at launching aggressive wars against governments and peoples who do not buckle under. Today’s method of domination is often linked with media propaganda about doing the right thing for “human rights”.
In the case of its ally Sri Lanka it did not need to send troops to win the war against Tamils struggles for liberation. The Western powers provided Sri Lankan governments military with weaponry, war intelligence and training to win the long war against Tamil nationhood. But, after the mutual victory, the axis also criticizes the current government for having committed excesses. This approach is the best of all possible worlds for Western dictates: world domination for the cause of humanity is what they say if you read between the lips of communicators for globalization George Bush- Barack Obama-Hilliary Clinton, Tony Blair-Gordon Brown-David Cameron.
While China and Russia also militarily and economically assisted Sri Lankan governments in avoiding federalism for the two peoples: majority Sinhalese and minority Tamils, they did so without the hyperbole of “protecting human rights”. Unfortunately, Cuba and its associates in the eight Latin American nations ALBA (Bolivarian Alliance of the peoples of the Americas) got caught up in the geo-political game by supporting Sri Lanka Sinhalese chauvinism politically but without funds and weapons.

Secretary Clinton and Assistant Secretary 

Posner Release the 2011 Human Rights Report








Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor

Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2011




Sri Lanka
To link directly to this report, use: http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?dynamic_load_id=186475

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
U.S. Department of State - Great Seal
Sri Lanka is a constitutional, multiparty republic. President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was reelected to a second six-year term in January 2010, and the parliament, which was elected in April 2010, share constitutional power. The government is dominated by the president’s family; two of the president’s brothers hold key executive branch posts as defense secretary and minister of economic development, while a third brother is the speaker of parliament. A large number of other relatives, including the president’s son, also serve in important political or diplomatic positions. Independent observers generally characterized the presidential and parliamentary elections as problematic. Both elections were fraught with violations of the election law by all major parties and were influenced by the governing coalition’s massive use of state resources. There were instances in which elements of the security forces acted independently of civilian control.
The major human rights problems were unlawful killings by security forces and government-allied paramilitary groups, often in predominantly Tamil areas, which led many to regard them as politically motivated, and attacks on and harassment of civil society activists, persons viewed as Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) sympathizers, and journalists by persons allegedly tied to the government, which created an environment of fear and self-censorship.
Other serious human rights problems included disappearances, as well as a lack of accountability for thousands who disappeared in previous years. Security forces tortured and abused detainees, poor prison conditions remained a problem, and authorities arbitrarily arrested and detained citizens. A number of suspects detained by police or other security forces died under questionable circumstances. Lengthy pretrial detention was a problem. Denial of fair public trial remained a problem, and the judiciary was subject to executive influence. The government infringed on citizens’ privacy rights. There were some restrictions on freedom of speech, press, assembly, association, and movement. Infringement on freedom of movement was less frequent than in 2010. While citizens were generally able to travel almost anywhere in the island, police and military checkpoints were still widespread in the north and east, and numerous high security zones and other areas remained off-limits to citizens. Authorities harassed journalists critical of the government and self-censorship was widespread. The president used his authority under the September 2010 18th Amendment to take greater control of appointments to previously independent public institutions that oversee the judiciary, the police, and human rights. The president now holds the authority to name all members to the Constitutional Council and its subsidiary councils, with only the requirement to “seek advice,” but not approval, of parliament. Doubts remained about the fairness of both the 2010 presidential and parliamentary elections due to election law violations and government influence. Lack of government transparency was a serious problem. Violence and discrimination against women were problems, as were abuse of children and trafficking in persons. Discrimination against persons with disabilities and against the ethnic Tamil minority continued, and a disproportionate number of victims of human rights violations were Tamils. Discrimination against persons based on their sexual orientation and against persons with HIV/AIDS were problems. Limits on workers’ rights and child labor remained problems.
The government prosecuted a very small number of officials implicated in human rights abuses but had yet to hold anyone accountable for alleged violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law that occurred during the conflict. Official impunity for a wide range of human rights abuses, particularly in cases of police torture, corruption, and attacks on media institutions, was a problem.
During the year unknown actors suspected of association with progovernment paramilitary groups committed killings, assaults, and intimidation of civilians. There were persistent reports of close, ground-level ties between paramilitary groups and government security forces

Sri Lankan repatriates in Araku left to fend for themselves

VISAKHAPATNAM, May 25, 2012


Return to frontpageThe Sri Lankan repatriates of Indian origin rehabilitated in the coffee plantations in the Araku Valley and Chintapalle agency areas are nobody's children. They are living like second class citizens despite the Indian government granting them citizenship. Nobody owns them, neither the state government, nor the local community and not even the Maoists.
They are not covered under any of the State government schemes including the Indiramma housing scheme. The only consolation after dumping them in the agency area was provision of wage employment to them in the coffee estates in the agency areas in the district.
Despite the community integrating with the local tribal community during the past 35 years, there are still viewed as non-locals. Being originally members of Scheduled Caste community, the benefits of Scheduled Tribe community were not applicable to them. The Land Transfer Regulation Act too is not on their side as they were not given ST status. Being non-locals they were not entitled to own any properties including lands or houses in the very places they had been living for 35 years.
The Maoists recently drove away two women repatriates from Lankapakalu village in Gudem Kothaveedhi mandal on the grounds that they were not tribals. The Maoists while giving a call to the local tribal communities to occupy the lands of coffee plantations were warning the repatriates community against occupying tribal lands on the ground that they are not scheduled tribes. Most of the children of the repatriates were stopping with secondary education.
Only a handful of them are graduates and none is pursuing higher education. The conservative Tamil community is unable to find suitable brides and grooms for their children. At present, 62 families with 200 members are living in their rehabilitation colonies at R.V. Nagar, Vagasara and Minumuluru near Paderu. Their number over the years dwindled from 200 families to 62 families due to their feeling like fish out of the water.
Sri Lanka and India signed the Sirimavo-Shastri Pact to rehabilitate the stateless people of 9.75 lakh people of Tamil origin in India. The pact later was amended as Sirimavo-Indira Gandhi Pact. As part of the pact, India agreed to give citizenship to 5.25 lakh of them and rehabilitate them in different states of India. The remaining stateless Tamils had been given Sri Lankan citizenship and were rehabilitated in their tea estates.
The 5 lakh-odd Sri Lankans of Indian origin had been distributed for rehabilitation in several states including Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh. In the process, 200 families had been sent to Araku Valley agency area where the AP Forest department had rehabilitated them in the coffee estates due to their rich experience as workers in the tea estates of Sri Lanka. Subsequently the forest department handed them over to the Andhra Pradesh Forest Development Corporation (APFDC).
S. Subramanyan, a repatriate living in R.V. Nagar, says that their plight had has been miserable as they were treated as foreigners despite possessing Indian Citizenship. All welfare schemes of the state government have eluded them. M. Subbamma of Lankapakala bemoaned that they were driven away by the Maoists from the village. The 200 odd members of the repatriate community are urging the district Collector to find ways and means to cover them under all government welfare schemes and save their community from further misery.
Gota objected to withdrawing court martial verdict
Friday, 25 May 2012
Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa has told the President not to pardon and exonerate Sarath Fonseka from the 30 month jail term given by the second court martial, reliable sources said.
The Defence Secretary has said that such an action would displease the senior military personnel who sat in the court martial and others who have opposed Fonseka.
The President had also agreed and has therefore not exonerated Fonseka from the guilty verdicts. Therefore, Fonseka has lost his civic rights for a period of seven years since he has served a jail term for two years.
A senior Buddhist monk had inquired about Fonseka’s release from the President when he had visited Kataragama on the 23rd and visited the ailing Vice Chancellor of the Uva Wellassa University, Ven. Dr. Aluthwewa Soratha Thero.
The President has said that he had not pardoned Fonseka from the court martial verdict since it would have put the military seniors in a difficult situation.
However, the President has added that he had the constitutional power to pardon and exonerate Fonseka from the court martial verdict as well. He has observed that he could discuss with military heads and get their consent to grant a pardon to Fonseka if he displayed good behavior.
The President has said that Fonseka soon after his release was trying to take him and senior military personnel before an international tribunal.
China to help Lanka launch first satellite in 2015
    May 25, 2012
China will help Sri Lanka launch its first satellite by 2015, officials said. Local company SupremeSAT said it has reached an agreement with the Sri Lankan board of investment for $20 million for the project. It has entered into an agreement with China's state-owned China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC) for the design, manufacturing and launching of the satellite, Xinhua reported.
By 2015, the company hopes to utilise the orbital slot of Sri Lanka -- located at 50 degrees east -- and launch the island's first telecom satellite.
"We already have two co-branded satellites with the Chinese company in orbit and by 2015 we hope to launch our own satellite which will be Sri Lanka's first," a SupremeSAT official told Xinhua.
The CGWIC is the sole commercial organisation authorised by the Chinese government to provide satellites, commercial launch services and to carry out international space cooperation.
SupremeSAT will offer all types of telecom services including broadband and networking services, various broadcast solutions and other services such as e-government and e-learning.
SupremeSAT chairman RM Manivannan said the firm was coordinating with the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission on the necessary approval for the launch.

Unlawful killings in SL-US


FRIDAY, 25 MAY 2012
The United States has said that ‘unlawful killings by security forces and government-allied paramilitary groups are a major human rights problem in Sri Lanka, often in the predominantly Tamil areas.’

The 2011 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices published by the U.S. State Department stated that “The major human rights problems were unlawful killings by security forces and government-allied paramilitary groups, often in predominantly Tamil areas, which led many to regard them as politically motivated, and attacks on and harassment of civil society activists, persons viewed as Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) sympathizers, and journalists by persons allegedly tied to the government, which created an environment of fear and self-censorship.”

Releasing the report today at the State Department Secretary of State Hilary Clinton said these human rights reports United States Government makes clear to governments around the world that they are being watched.

"We are watching and we are holding you accountable," she said adding that the U.S. makes clear to citizens and activists everywhere: "You are not alone. We are standing with you."

The report also stated that “the Sri Lankan government prosecuted a very small number of officials implicated in human rights abuses but had yet to hold anyone accountable for alleged violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law that occurred during the conflict.”

"Official impunity for a wide range of human rights abuses, particularly in cases of police torture, corruption, and attacks on media institutions, was a problem."

The report recognized that although enforced and involuntary disappearances continued to be a problem, the number of such disappearances appeared to have declined from previous years.

The Report recognized the government's plans to relocate and expand several prison facilities and its collaboration with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to modernize the prison system.

The report on Sri Lanka
Fonseka’s life under threat
Friday, 25 May 2012
The government has not provided any security to Sarath Fonseka following his release from Welikada Prison. Fonseka played a key role in eliminating the LTTE from the country.
A group of retired army personnel supportive of Fonseka are looking at filing a petition before courts to impress upon the government to provide security to Fonseka.
They have met senior lawyers on the 23rd to discuss the matter.
The President had promised MP Tiran Alles that Fonseka would be provided with VIP security, but the government has not responded positively following Fonseka’s release.
The Police Spokesperson said if Fonseka made a request about his security, it would be considered.
A retired army officer supportive of Fonseka said that he could easily be targeted by a sniper from the marsh land adjoining his residence in Thalawatugoda.
Reuters   YAHOO! NEWS    Wed, May 23, 2012

Amnesty accuses U.N. council of "failed leadership"

LONDON (Reuters) - Rights group Amnesty Internationallambasted the United Nations Security Council on Thursday as "tired, out of step and increasingly unfit for purpose".
In its annual report, Amnesty said the failure of world powers to take stronger action on Syria was evidence that a sclerotic security council was hamstrung by vested interests, and also warned of abuses arising from Europe's economic crisis.
Permanent security council members Russia, a key arms supplier to Syria, and China have shielded Syrian President Bashar al-Assadfrom tough sanctions.
The United Nations says at least 9,000 civilians have been killed in Assad's crackdown on a March 2011 uprising. Amnesty said the security council had failed to fulfill its mandate to take "prompt and effective" action to preserve international peace and security.
Amnesty Secretary General Salil Shetty told Reuters the security council should be reformed so that a veto could not be used to block action in cases of gross human rights violations.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Annual Report 2012 - Salil Shetty

Participants of the impending protests fiercely threatened and intimidated by Govt.
thursday 24 of May 2012
(Lanka-e-News-24.May.2012, 8.30PM) The police and the army had been used to avert the protests that were scheduled to be staged at Vavuniya . The villagers who were to participate had been threatened and intimidated against taking part in the demonstrations. An injunction order had also been taken by the police to stop this protest demonstrations yesterday (23).

The protests to be staged was against the failure to re settle the displaced persons in their original villages ; acquisition of their lands forcibly by the Govt. and their officials; and demanding the release of the political prisoners and restoration of civil administration in those areas.
This demonstration was to be staged by the ‘Sahodarayo janatha Pavura ‘ Organization . 
The convener of the Organization , Sunil Handunetti M P , former M P Ramalingam Chandrasekeran and others were to participate . They had also visited the political prisoners in the Vavuniya prison who have staged a fast unto death which began six days ago. Sunil Handunetti regretted that though the prisoners are on an ongoing six days fast , no Govt.officials have focused their attention on this grave issue. 
http://www.asianews.it/inc/templates/files/testata-en.jpgby Melani Manel Perera
Catholic priests participate in a meeting in Jaffna (Northern Province) where they criticise the government for violating the fundamental rights of Tamils in the north. In Batticaloa (Eastern Province), 184 war widows are still living in temporary housing without running water, electricity, toilet facilities or government financial assistance.

Colombo (AsiaNews) - In Sri Lanka's predominantly Tamil north, religious celebrations are restricted, freedom of association is violated and the traditional culture is being undermined, this according to Catholic priests from the southern part of the country, members of the Christian Solidarity Movement (CSM). At a meeting in Jaffna (Northern Province), local prelates said, "There is a need for a political solution so that that the Tamil people are recognised as part of the nation." In the island's eastern region, serious problems also persist, especially for war widows.
For almost 30 years (1983-2009), the island nation was the scene of civil war between the government and the Liberation Tamil Tigers of Elam (LTTE), a rebel group fighting for an independent state in the northern and eastern provinces of the country, where a majority of the poplation is Tamil.
Rapidly, the conflict took on an ethnic character until its conclusion with the rebel's defeat (following the killing of their leader). The war caused heavy losses, and created a huge cleavage between the impoverished Tamil north and east (with more than 200,000 internally displaced people) and the rich and prosperous Sinhalese south.
Since the end of the war, religious leaders and national and international NGOs have denounced on several occasions the situation in which Tamils still find themselves.
New concerns were also voiced at the meeting in Jaffna. "There are attempts to Sinhalese Tamil areas," southern priests told AsiaNews. "Buddhist statutes are put up in places where there are no Buddhists. Sinhalese physicians are brought in even though they cannot communicate with most of their patients because they cannot speak the Tamil language."
People in the Eastern Province are not faring much better. In the district of Batticaloa, 184 war widows in five villages, Weligahakandiya, Kopawali, Thumpalochcholai, Kithul and Urukaamam, are still forced to live in temporary housing without running water, electricity and toilet facilities.
"These are major problems and they need an urgent solution," said Laveena, one of the war widows. "We told Sivaneshathurai Chandrakanthan, chief minister of the province, about it in a report."
The report itself documents the overall situation in the five villages. About 250 families do not receive any aid under the Samurdi (prosperity) initiative, a national savings and credit programme for the poor; 647 families are without toilet facilities; 780 have no drinking water; 790 have no electricity; and 584 are in temporary housing.
Wimal should know. facing war crimes is not a contract but true patriotism
thursday 24 of May 2012
(Lanka-e-News-24.May.2012, 8.30PM) During yesterday media briefing National Freedom Alliance minister Wimal Weerawansa accused Gen. Sarath fonseka as to whose contract he is prepared to give evidence if the government is ready to help for an international war crime investigation.

He further said Gen. Fonseka has nothing to give evidence as he was not in Sri Lanka during the last few days of the war. It was a known fact that Gen. Fonseka was in touch with senior commanders in the army and giving instructions on mobile how to carry on operations during the last few days when he was in China.

Wimal weerawansa should know that Gen, Sarath Fonseka is the General of Sri Lanka army during the war and not an ordinary minister who give statements to the gallery behind the curtains. 

Gen. Fonseka is capable enough to face the allegations of war crimes and refute all charges against Sri Lanka army. Further he will not indulge in protests in front of the US embassy and show his disagreement. Wimal weerawansa should know that facing the war crimes is not a contract but it is true patriotism which minister weerawansa does not have. Gen Fonseka is a true patriotic who can defend Sri Lanka army for alleged war crimes.
It appears that Wimal weerawansa does not want to clear the allegations against the Sri Lanka army for alleged war crimes. Minister weeranwansa should know that refusing allegations and fasting in front of the UN is not civilized act and not going to clear the charges against SL army. I wish to ask Wimal weerawansa except fasting in front of UN and speaking to the gallery what actions has he taken as a patriotic minister stooping to the Mahinda Rajapakse government to clear the charges of war crimes against SL army?
By the way Gen Sarath Fonseka is well conversant in English language to face the international war crimes.

We wish him all the best
Robin hood
IndianDefenceReview  21 April, 2011



Sympathy grows for LTTE internationally

A United Nations report leaked recently, estimates thousands of civilians were killed during the fighting between Sri Lankan forces and the LTTE - known as the Tamil Tigers in 2009.
The document cites "credible allegations" that government forces deliberately shelled civilians and repeatedly targeted hospitals. If proven, the allegations amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Hundreds of thousands of civilians were trapped in the fighting and it's estimated that between 20,000 to 40,000 were killed.
The Tamil Tigers are also heavily criticised by the three member panel, and stand accused of forcing civilians to remain in the conflict zone and using them as hostages and human shields.
The UN is also criticised in the report for failing "to take actions that might have protected civilians." The panel says casualty figures collected by the UN should have been made public at that time.
Releasing the figures "would have strengthened the call for the protection of civilians while those events ...were unfolding" the panel concludes.
But conditions for aid agencies and UN officials on the ground were difficult.