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, June 3, 2012


Rajapaksa’s confirmed London visit elicits Tamil protests

London protest
London protestTamilNet [TamilNet, Saturday, 02 June 2012, 10:46 GMT]
Mahinda Rajapaksa’s scheduled visit to the British Monarch’s Diamond Jubilee celebrations next week and his planned speech at Mansion House, and the UK government’s endorsement of the genocide accused Sri Lankan president drew protests from hundreds of Eezham Tamils at a demonstration organized by the Tamil Coordinating Committee-UK (TCC-UK) at the Commonwealth Secretariat in London on Friday. “The invitation of Mr Rajapaksa who is manipulating geopolitical rivalries at the UN to evade international law flies in the face of the Commonwealth's claimed values of human rights and international law,” Sasithar Maheswaran from the TCC-UK told TamilNet. 



"The UK, which often blames China and Russia for inaction at international fora has also exposed its duplicity by allowing Mr Rajapksa to enter the country in the first place,” he added. 
London protest  London protest
 

London protest
London protest
London protest
Likewise, a petition submitted by the TCC-UK to the Commonwealth Secretariat urged the organization to immediately withdraw the invitation extended to Mr Rajapaksa for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Lunch and demanded the Secretariat to take measures to suspend Sri Lanka until it ends its military occupation of the Tamil homeland.

“Despite growing calls from human rights groups and the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights for an independent international investigation into the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Sri Lankan armed forces, Mr Rajapaksa has continued to resist any such measures designed to preserve international law,” the petition further read. 

“The invitation of such an individual to a ceremonial lunch by the Commonwealth, which claims to founded on values of human rights and rule of law, is most disturbing.”

“While many Sinhala-Buddhist leaders of the past have gone unpunished for their part in the genocide of Eelam Tamils, the vast amount of evidence stacked against Mr Rajapaksa, in the information era, should be seen as an opportunity to finally uphold international law and help halt the genocide.”

Mr Rajamanoharan from the TCC-UK concluded the event stating that if Rajapaksa arrived in the UK, there would be massive demonstrations outside Mansion House on 6th June.




Rajapaksa at Queen's Jubilee a blot: Queen's Award recipient

TamilNet[TamilNet, Sunday, 03 June 2012, 03:30 GMT]
“It will be a blot on modern world history if war criminal Mahinda Rajapakse is to be allowed to dine with Her Majesty the Queen Elizabeth II on the Diamond Jubilee celebration. We are proud of her regime but sad about this intrusion of a war criminal,” said Queen’s Service Medal (QSM) recipient, Mr. A. Thevarajan in New Zealand, remembering Mu’l’livaaykkal genocide in a gathering at Auckland on 19 May, which was addressed by politicians of NZ, Mr Phil Twyford, Labour MP and Ms Jan Logie Green MP. Responding, a new generation political activist in Jaffna asked how the global Tamils living all over the former empire, where the sun was never setting, are going to mark their protest in contemporary world history for the insult shown to the genocide-affected nation of Eezham Tamils by Her Majesty’s Government in the UK.

A Theva Rajan
A Theva Rajan
Thevarajan also said that “The International Community cannot give selective exception to Sri Lankan war criminals while tightening their action on the leader of Syria for deaths counted in hundreds only. In Sri Lanka, even the conservative figure surpasses 40,000 deaths.”

The IC will take care of only those who could assert themselves. The insult shown on Eezham Tamils by the UK, the colonial legacy of which was the very genesis of the crisis for Eezham Tamils, is an occasion to prove the global ability of Eezham Tamils in asserting themselves. But those who present themselves as ‘articulating’ leaders of Eezham Tamils seem to believe only in playing second fiddle to the so-called IC, by which it is never going to show the attention it shows on Syria on Eezham Tamils, the political activist in Jaffna further said.

Speaking at the New Zealand event Phil Twyford said, “The Labour Party has been closely following the events in Sri Lanka.”

Conveying a message to the occasion, Labour MP and Leader of the Opposition, Mr. David Shearer said, “My Party’s position on this issue is that that those who have committed atrocities during the civil war in Sri Lanka must be brought to justice through international bodies.”

Shearer remembered his earlier career spending two and a half years working with a humanitarian agency in the North and East of the island in the 1990s.

However, while Twyford was expressing hopes on the LLRC recommendations, Shearer was talking on “reconciliation between the communities affected in Sri Lanka.”

Eezham Tamils are yet to enlighten world politicians how the LLRC recommendations aim only at fulfillment of structural genocide and ‘reconciliation’ is not between two affected communities, but a militarily imposed ‘reconciliation’ between the oppressors and the subjugated.

The Greens will pursue the issue until justice is meted out to Tamils, said Ms Jan Logie.

Ms. Nirupa George, a young Lawyer and Tamil activist made a Power Point presentation of the ongoing oppression and humiliation of Tamils in the island of Sri Lanka.

While Mr Sabesan outlined the objectives of the Tamil struggle, Mr Gaureesan and Ms Tharmini anchored the event in Tamil and English.


NGO Files: Free Media Movement Hides 40 Million Fraud


June 2, 2012

Colombo TelegraphFree Media Movement  now says they are not doing further investigations. But its own reports shows rupees 30,900,000 (30.9 million) went unaudited and they failed to submit accounts for the official years 2007/2008 and 2008/2009 to its membership. Although the office-bearers positions are volunteer positions, FMM is a registered NGO under Sri Lankan law. Under the Sri Lankan law FMM has to submit its annual accounts to the NGO Commissioner. It has even failed to fulfill this obligation. 
“Sunil Jayasekara was a member of the executive committee at the time and it is that ExCo that is responsible for the finances of the organisation. What is crystal clear in the backdrop of Deshapriya’s deceit and the FMM cover-up is that the twisted logic and subtle manipulation of facts are all the same. All this, ironically, when ethics codes have been formulated anew by media organizations all over the world, including Sri Lanka.” writes the Editor of the Sunday Leader Frederica Jansz .
“Following the AGM, new allegations are now emerging that Sunil Jayasekara violated existing rules and spent money without the ‘prior’ approval of the executive committee” she further writes.
Below we give Frederica Jansz’s  article ‘Free Media Movement Hides 40 Million Fraud‘; 
Corruption is rampant in this country. But, even as we point fingers at this regime as we have done with each successive government it is only right we look inwards and examine our own backyard. We don’t need to look far. The Free Media Movement priding itself on being a non-partisan independent group of journalists, newspaper editors and media personalities who are committed to freedom of expression, opinion and information stand guilty of hiding a forty million rupee fraud. Read More


Extended time in police custody: Is it Necessary or permissible?

3 Jun, 2012   Image courtesy JDS


Groundviews



Groundviews


The decision of the Justice Ministry to amend the law relating to the period of detention of people arrested and to extend it to forty-eight hours instead of the existing twenty-four is alarming and unjustified to say the least. The statement of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka issued through its President is more alarming and also saddening because it points to the fact that the justice Ministry has not thought it necessary or fit to consult the said association before embarking on this course of unprecedented action. Secondly the Bar Association as they normally should, have studied the legal position here and in other civilized countries before rushing into readily express their unqualified approval to this kind of legislation. 
The casual way the President has reacted shows that the Bar Association has failed to consider this matter in depth before expressing its unqualified approval. It follows that the President will not speak on the subject in Parliament except to approve the provisions.
TNA fires salvo for self-determination
  • Reconciliation process faces serious challenges partly due to contradictory statements by government
  • Main Tamil party outlines document, seeking sweeping powers for provincial council
By Our Political Editor     SUNDAY, 03 JUNE 2012
President Mahinda Rajapaksa interrupted a four-day visit to Thailand to return to Colombo on Friday morning. He left for Bangkok the same evening after taking part in two main engagements. One was the wedding of Minister Arumugam Thondaman's daughter Nachiyar at the Water's Edge in Battaramulla. Some 900 guests, including cabinet ministers and leading opposition personalities, were among those present.
The weekly cabinet meeting on Wednesday evening was put off for Friday and fixed at 2 p.m. However, officials hurriedly telephoned ministers to say the meeting had been advanced to 12.30 p.m. Rajapaksa chaired the session which was routine and did not see him make any remarks. Discussions and decisions on some 34 cabinet papers, including the tabling of annual reports of some state concerns, were completed in less than an hour. Rajapaksa flew back the same evening to Bangkok.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa meeting TNA leader R. Sampanthan at the wedding of the daughter of Minister Arumugam Thondaman. The President told the TNA leader, "Instead of issuing media statements, why don't you come and see me"
On Tuesday, he was entertained to dinner by Princess Maha Chakri Siridhorn and other members of the Royal family. Five members of Rajapaksa's entourage were also included for the event. Rajapaksa also addressed a gathering at the UN centre on the significance of Vesak before returning to Colombo yesterday. He is due to leave for Britain today. He will take part in a luncheon hosted by Commonwealth Secretary General Kamalesh Sharma to honour Queen Elizabeth II on the 60th year of her accession to the British throne.
That will be his only engagement with the British monarch. Whilst the Queen is the head of the Commonwealth, Sri Lanka has taken over the leadership of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) after the last meeting was held in October last year in Perth, Australia.
Labour Party has been closely following the events in Sri Lanka

( June 03, 2012, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) “ The Labour Party has been closely following the events in Sri Lanka. The alleged Crimes committed during the last stages of the war are well documented in the Expert Panel’s report of the UN Secretary General. The Sri Lankan Government’s own LLRC report has enumerated some items for implementation as a precondition for reconciliation. The Geneva Human Rights Council Resolution against Sri Lanka seeks to reiterate only this. It s is up to the Government to fulfil this obligation “ observed Mr. Phil Twyford , Labour Party MP while addressing the 3rd year remembrance day gathering in Auckland, New Zealand. Continuing he said that it is only by addressing these Issues that Sri Lanka can regain its lost image

The Leader of the Labour Party and Hon: Leader of the Opposition , Mr. David Shearer MP in his message conveyed :

“My Party’s position on this issue is that that those who have committed atrocities during the civil war in Sri Lanka must be brought to justice through international bodies. We also believe that effort should also be placed on reconciliation between the communities affected in Sri Lanka. IK feel very strongly about this issue because I spent two and a half years working for a humanitarian aid agency in the North and East of Sri Lanka, in the early 1990s.”

Ms. Jan Logie, Green Party M P said that her Party had always voiced the injustices perpetrated on the Tamils in Sri Lanka both in and out of Parliament She recalled how her former Parliamentary Leader Mr. Keith Locke raised the issue of the boat refugees and war crimes in Parliament She promised that the Greens will pursue the issue until justice is meted out to the Tamils.

Mr. A Theva Rajan showed evidence of the antiquity of the Tamils in Sri Lanka and asserted that the Tamils are no immigrants and that they are indigenous to Sri Lanka. He also pointed out how Tamil enriched the Sinhala language. Referring to Sri Lanka’s Foreign Affairs Minister G L Peiris’s utterances in the Capital Hill, USA said that every utterance was absolute falsehood and wondered if G L stood for Gamini Lakshman or Great Lies. He challenged if Peiris could substantiate his statements in an open debate either in public or in a TV Station. It is easy to make such untrue statements from within safe enclaves as there is none to challenge them.

Continuing further, he said there is enough evidence against the Military Governors of North Brigadier-General C A Chandrsiri and Governor of East Rear Admiral Mohan Jayawickrema and the Army Commander in the North Brigadier-General Mahinda Haturusinghe with regard to enforcing genocide on the Tamils. It is time to consolidate these evidences and use them against these military men when they are charged in the International Court of Criminal Justice. The Government Agents of the Tamil Districts will also be in for trouble as long as they enforce genocidal policies. No one in the genocide against the Tamils will be spared. The International Community cannot give selective exception to Sri Lankan war criminals while tightening their action on the leader of Syria for deaths counted in hundreds only .. In Sri Lanka, even the conservative figure surpasses 40,000 deaths. It will be a blot on modern world history if war criminal Mahinda Rajapakse is to be allowed to dine with Her Majesty the Queen Elizabeth II on the Diamond Jubilee celebration. We are proud of her regime but sad about this intrusion of a war criminal.

Mr. Sabesan from Australia outlined the objectives of the Tamil struggle. He underlined the need for consistency in the goals already set

Earlier Ms. Nirupa George, a young Lawyer and Tamil activist made a Power Point presentation of the ongoing oppression and humiliation of Tamils in Sri Lanka..

The meeting went through all the formal rituals before the speeches started. Gaureesan and Tharnini functioned as Tamil and English MCs.

War-displaced landowners can claim property


Sunday June 3, 2012

New law to help disadvantaged people in north and east
Absentee land and property owners in the once war-ravaged north and east will be able to reclaim ownership under a new law, Justice Minister Rauff Hakeem said yesterday.
There will be an independent mechanism to settle disputes connected with land and property, he told the Sunday Times. In terms of existing laws, he said, a person holding uninterrupted “adverse” possession for ten years is entitled to ownership.
The 30-year-long separatist war led to persons occupying land or holding immovable property like houses after the owners were displaced or disadvantaged, he said. Mr. Hakeem was in Kuwait yesterday.
On Friday, the Cabinet approved a Prescription (Special Provisions) Act recommended by him. It will replace provisions in the existing Prescription Ordinance to facilitate the new move. The proposed law will be a dedicated enactment which will deal with the period of the armed conflict only.
Originally the new law was intended to be an amendment to the Prescription Ordinance. However, the Law Commission urged the Ministry of Justice that it should be a dedicated piece of legislation covering the armed conflict as well as “other situations which may arise in the future”.
Any person who has become displaced or disadvantaged at any time during the period starting May 1, 1983 and ending December 31, 2012 shall be deemed, for the purpose of the new law, to be a displaced or disadvantaged person. The proposed law defines a “displaced person” as one who has been forced or obliged to flee or leave his home or places of habitual residence as a result of or in order to avoid the effects of the armed conflict which prevailed in Sri Lanka.
A “disadvantaged” person has been described as one who is unable to pursue his rights or defend himself in the court, in which he is by law required to pursue or defend such rights as a result of the armed conflict which prevailed in Sri Lanka.

Indifference And Intolerance In A Disabling-State


Colombo TelegraphJune 2, 2012

“…the licence of an unrestrained clique is almost always enjoyed at the expense of genuine liberty of others”.
AC Grayling (Toward the Light of Liberty)
Will the corrosive Rajapaksa ethos prove to be a far more abiding yoke than even Rajapaksa rule?
Will Rajapaksa politico-administrative mores become transformed into governance-traditions, and thereby survive the eventual fall of the Rajapaksa regime?
Though partisan-politicisation of state entities began well before Rajapaksa Rule, the Lankan state always had key-niches which were immune to this malaise. But, as the Siblings intensify their efforts to impose their familial-seal on the Lankan state, these hitherto impregnable citadels are succumbing, one after another, with nary a ripple.
Until last month, the Governor of the Central Bank personified this degeneration of the pillars of the Lankan state into handmaidens of Familial Rule.
Now his position of pre-eminence is being challenged, by the Public Trustee.
According to JVP parliamentarian Sunil Handunetti, “the Public Trustee’s Department has paid Rs. 144,000 to ‘Sitha Stores’ for a suit for Prime Minister D. M. Jayaratne to be worn during a visit to Vavuniya… (It) also spent Rs. 269,000 on books and clothes distributed during the tour” (Sri Lanka Mirror – 27.5.2012).
The Public Trustee is, well, the Public Trustee; the title says it all. Until the Rajapaksas unleashed their single-minded effort to annihilate the lines of demarcation between state and government and state and the Ruling Family, no political muck besmirched the Public Trustee’s Department. Now this hitherto august institution is becoming a petty-cash supplier for the rulers; “The auditor general has questioned the public trustee’s spending of Rs. 500,000 on a pandal to mark the president’s induction in office…” (ibid).
This latest development – and our collective-indifference to it – is indicative of the distance travelled by Sri Lanka since the commencement of Rajapaksa rule, less than seven years ago.

Body found near Hindu College...BODY FOUND NEAR HINDU COLLEGE...


June 1, 2012  
The body of a 38-year-old man, from of Batticaloa, was discovered near the Hindu College in Bambalapitiya last night. (Pic by Manjula Charantha)




Star hotel near BIA, China frontrunner


Sunday June 3, 2012

The Government has decided to build a luxury hotel near the Bandaranaike International Airport.
The frontrunner identified to undertake the construction project on a build-operate-and transfer basis is the China Harbour Corporation.
The second is Quant International Ltd., a British firm and Finco (Pvt.) Ltd., a Sri Lankan company. They have been listed in that order by the Airport and Aviation Services Limited (AASL).
In January this year, the Cabinet directed that the project be undertaken through the funds of the AASL. However, the company which administers and controls the country’s only international airport replied that it was unable to fund any project due to lack of funds. The Treasury has also said it will not be in a position to fund the project.
On Friday, the Cabinet approved a proposal that the project where the AASL would charge a concession fee on gross sales turnover of the hotel and a land rental on the valuation of the land allocated to the project.
Civil Aviation Minister Priyankara Jayaratne has said the AASL will now call for “Request for Proposals” from international and local investors. Ministerial sources confirmed yesterday that China Harbour Corporation had shown keen interest in making a strong bid. “We will consider all bids before a final decision,” a source said.
The construction of a new luxury hotel near the BIA will be in addition to three-star hotels operated by at least two different private concerns. Hotel industry sources said yesterday that instead of a luxury hotel near the airport, what was required was a better transportation system since the city had a number of resort hotels. They also pointed out that such luxury hotels were also located along the Negombo coast.

Legislating Courtsey On The Part Of Police Officers?


Colombo TelegraphJune 3, 2012

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena
Amendments to Sri Lanka’s Criminal Procedure Code permitting the police to detain suspects up to forty eight hours are now apparently on their way, the justification being that the law needs to be more stringent to curb the exponential rise of crime in Sri Lanka today. Taken together with the recently gazetted Rules relating to the Appearance of Attorneys at Law at Police Stations by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) under Section 55 of the Police Ordinance, some interesting issues arise for discussion.
Increased detention of suspects
In some respects, the pending amendment to increase the period of detention may not cause much comment. The Criminal Procedure Special Provisions Act first passed in 2005 and then further extended for a period of two years in 2007, extended the period of detention of suspects up to forty-eight hours in relation to certain special offences (abetment, conspiracy, murder, culpable homicide not amounting to murder, attempt to murder, kidnapping/abducting with intent to secretly and wrongfully confine, etc.
Though the extension of this law should have been done following its lapsing, this was not effected due to an extraordinary lapse on the part of the Ministry of Justice. This resulted in confusion worse compounded in Parliament, as this columnist recalls, when the main opposition quite rightly objected to a retrospective application of the special provisions law. From all relevant newspaper reports, it appears that the currently contemplated amendment to the Criminal Procedure Code is being pushed through in consequence thereof.
This 2005/2007 Special Provisions law provided that suspects arrested and detained under its provisions shall be afforded an opportunity to consult an attorney-at-law of his choice and to communicate with any relative or friend of his choice during the period of such detention. Though the pending amendment to the Criminal Procedure Code (based on the Special Provisions Law), has not been made available to the public, it appears that this provision of legal counsel to suspects will be continued.
Rules relating to treatment of lawyers        Read More  

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Gotabaya Rajapaksa on disappearances in Sri Lanka

  2 Jun, 2012

In March after making a feature on enforced disappearances for the BBC, I made a further radio broadcast for our From Our Own Correspondent programme, later expanded for Groundviews, saying that I hoped Sri Lanka’s top leaders would be able to give answers about the fate of recent victims of enforced disappearance in Colombo and other cities.
The Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, has dashed any such hopes in my BBC interview with him broadcast earlier this week.
Screen grab from BBC video
He shed no new light on what has happened to Ramasamy Prabagaran, Nethiyas Chandrapala, Lalith Weeraraj, Kugan Muruganathan, Upali Mendis, Stephen Suthararaj or other unfortunate victims.  Instead he suggested lists of victims were inflated or that the disappeared were criminals or the victims of kidnapping for ransom.  As for any suspicion that the state was in some cases responsible, he said the government had no interest in doing such things.
“No, that is wrong actually – you are taking this from some website,” was his initial response when I mentioned missing people.  [Editors note: In an interview published in the Sunday Leader newspaper on 27 May 2012, Gotabaya Rajapaksa mentioned Groundviews as the site which published figures on disappearances] I cited the case of Ramasamy Prabagaran, whose wife I interviewed after she saw him dragged away screaming by occupants of a white van, two days before he was due to testify that the police had severely tortured him in detaining him from 2009 to 2011.
To this he said that of about 59 cases since October, which he said a diplomat had mentioned to him, 18 were “completely false”.  Others had been solved.  “It can happen – people can abduct and ask for money.”  There were only eight cases that could not be accounted for, he said.
“But I want to tell you this,” he added.   “There are a lot of people that commit crimes here…  There are certain people who are in the underworld, who are responsible for a lot of crime and who are drug dealers who do various things here – and they escape – it’s very easy to go to India through various means.  [They] escape to India, south India.”
This echoed other government statements to the effect that some missing people – including the cartoonist and journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda – had somehow “disappeared” of their own choice.
My response to Mr Rajapaksa was that many families were mourning for their missing loved ones and there was no indication that they had gone abroad.  He said that in one recent case a woman had reported her son abducted but he had then turned up in Canada and committed a crime.  I said there were, nonetheless, recent very real cases in Colombo.  He said these were “wrong allegations”.  I said they were not wrong as I had met close family members, upon which he said, humorously, that I shouldn’t get angry as he was usually the one that did that.
He continued by implying that the whole affair was concocted to damage the image of Sri Lanka (or its government):
“I am the Secretary Defence.  I have  investigated this.  Don’t take the word from these people.  Take the word from me…  These are wrong allegations.
“I have investigated these things.  These are not correct…  These are lies to give a wrong picture of Sri Lanka… a wrong image of Sri Lanka by the rump of the LTTE who is remaining outside and trying to damage the image of Sri Lanka.”
I asked next about the case of Sagara Senaratne, a former local councillor who was taken away in a mysterious white van in March and said that he was aware of another man being assaulted in the back of the same vehicle.
Mr Senaratne happened to be the brother-in-law of a government minister, Jeevan Kumaratunga.  He told the pro-government newspaper ‘Divaina’ that he was abruptly freed after his driver contacted Mr Kumaratunga who contacted the Defence Secretary and the President.
He was grateful to them for saving his life, he said.  But, I said to Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, it seemed to some that the government was involved in such 
abductions.
“No we are not committing the abductions.  Why should we abduct a minister’s relation or someone?” he said.  There were in fact several cases where he had helped track down and free victims of kidnapping for ransom.
As for Ramasamy Prabagaran, it was not necessary to “harass” such a person given that the government had freed many LTTE suspects or others arrested for various crimes since the end of the war.  He said 11,000 surrenderees had been put through the rehabilitation process; and that 4,000 other long-term detainees, kept in high-security facilities like Boossa, had been reduced in number to 234.  They, too, had been rehabilitated and released.
“People don’t talk about the action that we have taken for these detainees,” Mr Rajapaksa said.  “It’s very unfortunate to take isolated cases.”
In the same breath, then, the Defence Secretary mentioned a recent abduction case in Colombo and the separate issue of thousands of LTTE suspects.
Ultimately, he said, it was up to the police to look into cases of disappearance.  As there has been almost no police progress in dozens of disappearance cases, this gives no comfort to the families still wondering where their loved ones are.
Watch a video featuring excerpts of the interview with the Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaka on the BBC website.

Sri Lanka: Military Might on Display


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image
The third anniversary of defeat of the Tamil Tigers has not brought a formal end to the state of emergency in Sri Lanka. Most provisions of the emergency laws are in force. And thousands of Tamil youth are still being held without charge or trial as LTTE suspects under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act, says the author.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse used the third anniversary of the defeat of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to stage an unprecedented show of military might. The parade only underscored the degree to which his government rests on the country’s huge military apparatus.

In all, more than 13,500 members of the security forces paraded in Colombo: 398 army officers and 4,628 soldiers, 115 naval officers and 2,651 sailors, 78 air force officers and 1,383 airmen, together with the civil defence force and the police, including the notorious Special Task Force. The parade was accompanied by 148 vehicle columns, a fly-past of 33 war planes and a naval convoy of 72 warships off the coast.

The roads leading to the Galle Face Green were all closed for a week to allow for rehearsals, causing serious disruption to traffic to the central city area. On May 19, the day of the celebrations, ordinary people were totally absent. The event was an entirely military affair—even the children who were brought in to wave the national flag came from a school exclusively set up for the sons and daughters of servicemen.

The stench of militarism surrounded the entire affair. It was deliberately designed to intimidate working people and youth amid growing opposition to the Rajapakse government’s austerity measures. The parade and speeches were broadcast at length on radio and television.

Rajapakse’s speech again hailed the “victory” over the LTTE. Hundreds of thousands were killed in more than a quarter century of a criminal war to defend the power and privileges of the dominant Sinhala ruling elites. In the last months, the Sri Lankan military killed tens of thousands of civilians. After the last pockets of LTTE resistance were crushed, the army herded nearly 300,000 men, women and children into detention camps. Three years later, there are still 17,000 languishing in the camps.

Rajapakse referred to “war heroes and veterans” more than 15 times in the first 10 minutes of his speech. He boasted of the benefits his government had given to veterans: the largest housing project in Sri Lanka, a separate school for “war heroes”, care for disabled veterans, and grants for their children. “I do not think any other country in the world respects its heroes and veterans in such a manner,” he declared.

In reality, the ranks of the military were filled out with economic conscripts, young people driven to join up by poverty and unemployment. They were used as cannon fodder in a ruthless war of attrition that left many dead or disabled, with their families subsequently struggling to survive.

Referring to the role of the military, Rajapakse declared that the “war heroes” who established peace now have “the task of rebuilding the country and adding to its beauty.” Over the past three years, the government has extended the military’s ambit into many areas of the economy. The Urban Development Authority (UDA) has been placed under the defence ministry. It is overseeing the eviction of more than 70,000 families from shanties in central Colombo as part of the government’s plans to transform the city into a finance hub.

Rajapakse bragged that his government had ended the country’s state of emergency, but most of its provisions remain in force in separate legislation. Thousands of Tamil youth are still being held without charge or trial as “LTTE suspects” under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act.

Abductions and “disappearances” by pro-government death squads colluding with the security forces continue unabated. The government-appointed Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka has reported 21 disappearances from the beginning of the year to April 18. No one has been arrested for these crimes, let alone punished.

Towards the end of his speech, Rajapakse rejected calls for an end to the military occupation of Sri Lanka’s North and East. “We must ask if we are in a position to remove the armed forces camps in the north and reduce our attention on national security,” he declared. “That is not possible. Armed services camps are not found in the north alone. They are seen throughout the country. They are seen in Colombo and Giruvapattu in the south.”

The continued heavy presence of the military, not just in predominantly Tamil areas but throughout the island, points to acute underlying social tensions. The Sri Lankan military has not been reduced in size since the end of the war and remains, per capita, one of the largest in the world.

Rajapakse declared that the war had “compelled us all to live in the midst of many restrictions and obstructions” but insisted that “today, the country that faced such restrictions has returned to normal.” For working people this merely sounds like a bad joke. Rajapakse hinted at the growing opposition to the government when he appealed for “patience to save the victory we have won.” Workers expected that the end of the war would bring an improvement in living standards, but conditions have only worsened.

The government is under pressure from the International Monetary Fund to slash social spending and implement pro-market restructuring. Rajapakse has reduced price subsidies on a range of basic items, including fuel and essential foods. A virtual wage freeze is in place, even as prices rise and the rupee has devalued by nearly 20 percent. Only the wealthy elite has profited from the Rajapakse government’s projects to “rebuild the nation.”

The huge security forces and police state apparatus built up over nearly three decades of war is above all directed at defending the power and privileges of the ruling elite against the growing resistance of the working class. That was what was on parade at the “victory” celebrations.

-- By Wije Dias

31 years Remembrance of Jaffna library 

burnt by Government of Sri Lanka


Saturday, 02 June 2012 

Burning of Jaffna Library was one of the many unpunished crime done by successive governments of Sri Lanka against humanity, Tamil culture and civilization.
Murder
Last night
I dreamt
Buddha was shot dead
by the Police,
guardians of the law.
His body drenched in blood
on the steps
of the Jaffna Library
Under cover of darkness
came the ministers.
“His name is not on our list,
why did you kill him?”
they ask angrily,
“No sirs, no,
there was no mistake.
Without killing him
it was impossible
to harm a fly –
Therefore… ,” they stammered.
“Alright, then
hide the corpse.”
The ministers return.
The men in civvies
dragged the corpse
into the library.
They heaped the books
ninety thousand in all,
and lit the pyre
With the Cikalokavadda Sutta.
Thus the remains
of the Compassionate One
were burned to ashes
along with the Dhammapada.
Courtesy- Groundviews

Sri Lanka: Jaffna Public Library destroyed 

by Sinhala Police -

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