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

Tuesday, June 12, 2012


Sison reiterated long-standing US policy-US


  Tuesday, 12th June 2012

The US embassy in Colombo clarifying the statement made by Ambassador designate to Sri Lanka Michele J. Sison about Sri Lanka before the U.S. Congress, said the Ambassador’s statement reiterated long-standing US policy toward Sri Lanka, including calls for further demilitarization of the north.

Following is the full clarification sent by the United States embassy for Sri Lanka and Maldives

On June 6, Ambassador-designate Michele J. Sison testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as part of her confirmation process as President Obama's nominee for Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Maldives.

Her statement reiterated long-standing U.S. policy toward Sri Lanka, including calls for further demilitarization of the north, provincial council elections in the north, and mechanisms to deal with outstanding human rights issues.

Ambassador-designate Sison’s testimony is in complete accordance with U.S policy as well as previous statements by U.S. officials and also reflects the issues discussed during Secretary Clinton's meeting with Minister of External Affairs Peiris last month in Washington. Her testimony also noted the need for a broad range of partnerships between the United States and Sri Lanka.

Related link

Sri Lanka: Much Ado about Sampanthan’s Nothing


12-June-2012

Guest Column by Dr Kumar David 
Would there be consternation, palpitation and a media storm if some chap said: “The sun rises in the east, but sets in the west?” So why all the rumpus about TNA leader Rajavarothiam Sampanthan’s (RS) remarks at the TNA sessions in Batticaloa? RS said that if the denial of basic rights to the Tamils is not halted, there will be a backlash and secessionist demands will again come to the fore. What’s novel about that? Methinks it a pretty obvious platitude. What’s got government party politicos, the press and a johnny-come-late opportunist diplomat so hot under the collar? The left in Lanka (not the Dead Left in government) has long been explicit that if this racist government goes on the way it is – it knows no other way in any case – the country will implode and explode. I don’t know when, but when the sun rises in the east we can be reasonably sure it will set in the west.   
In fact the first person to enunciate this platitude, at a time when he was still a Marxist and before he got hired to draft constitutions, was Colvin R de Silva. Long before RS cut his teeth in politics old hands of my generation remember Colvin’s apt and grandiloquent turn of phrase in the 1950s: “You can have two languages and one country, or you can have one language and two countries”. Now isn’t RS simply paraphrasing the same sentiment, but in pedestrian prose?  
I suggest that international readers who want easy access to important articles on this topic contact SriLanka Brief at srilankabrief@gmail.comand ask for the combo they have done. They provide a page with click-click links to an interview with RS himself, Rajan Philips’ medium-term historical analysis, Jehan Perera’s assessment of RS’s tactical stance, an interesting piece by Kalana Senaratne, and three items of horse manure, one from the aforementioned opportunist, another by Dead-Leftist Tissa Vitarana, and the third, a piece by aging chauvinist Gunadasa Amerasekara. The last three are a blend of comic entertainment and obnoxious witch-hunting. 

The state of play       Full Story>>>

Supreme Court to decide if ‘motive’ matters in anti-terror law

Lawrence Greenspon, lawyer for convicted terrorist Momin Khawaja, is seen during a recess at the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa on Monday.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Lawrence Greenspon, lawyer for convicted terrorist Momin Khawaja, is seen during a recess at the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa on Monday.

The StarPublished On Mon Jun 11 2012     Tonda MacCharles



OTTAWA—Canada’s constitutional guarantees of free speech, religious freedom, and a citizen’s right to remain in the country are on trial at the country’s top court in a series of far-reaching challenges to Ottawa’s extradition and anti-terror laws.
Seven Supreme Court of Canada judges hearing a trio of terrorism appeals were urged Monday to “moderate the tenor of the times” and strike down a clause that declares “terrorist” activity to be any criminal act or facilitation of it that is driven by a “religious, political or ideological purpose.”
They were also urged to overturn what lawyers said were over-zealous extradition orders against Canadian citizens to face terrorism charges in the U.S. that could have been tried here.
Lawyer Lawrence Greenspon, representing Momin Khawaja, the first Canadian convicted under the post-9/11 law for participating in the 2004 London fertilizer bomb plot, says the “motive” clause that underlies the definition of terrorism goes too far. It punishes citizens who might express support for, but who don’t actively or knowingly “facilitate” actual terrorist activity, he said.

Surrendering Airwaves And Liberty To Nepotism


June 12, 2012 

By JC Weliamuna -
A Governance Analysis Of Frequency Allocation & TV Rights In Present Sri Lanka
JC Weliamuna
Frequency Allocation- A Grand Corruption?
Colombo TelegraphUnderstanding the State capture by Kleptocrats does not require a dedicated study; it is easily recognizable.  For the benefit of keen students of governance, let me begin this article with the definition of Kleptocracy: “A form of political and government corruption where the government exists to increase the personal wealth and political power of its ruling class at the expense of the wider population”.  Kleptocracies are mostly associated with authoritarian or nepotistic regimes.  In this article, I endeavor to examine some governance aspects of Sri Lankan style of frequency allocation with specific reference to TV rights.
Television licenses and the right to own television rights for sports are turning to be one of the most abused resources. Why? Firstly, an average person does not understand the mechanics or value of transactions and therefore it is often abused by those who control them.  Secondly, secrecy of broadcasting is generally maintained at the highest level of the political elite. Thirdly, in a State where regulatory framework is subject to interference, no challenge is possible against abuses. Finally, unlike other properties, radio frequency is not tangible and any contracts arising out of them cannot be measured by an average person.
Corruption in frequency allocation is rampant in several parts of the world. Let me take one example to demonstrate the financial losses that can cause to a State in such cases. One of the all-time biggest acts of corruption relating to the allocation of frequencies was reported from India. Known as the 2G Scam it was about the allocation of frequencies to mobile service providers for second generation mobile phones where 122 licenses were granted to 8 companies.  The estimated loss to the State was US$ 34.5 Billion! The Minister in charge of Telecommunication (A. Raja – DMK Tamil Nadu) was in the centre of the controversy. He and his secretary along with a group of executives of companies resorted to corrupt methods to secure frequency allocation licenses for the identified 8 companies.  Among the methods used was to advance the cutoff date of applications for licenses from 1st October to 25th September 2007.  There was no rule in India to publicly auction frequencies but the price at which the allocations were done was, however, set for the rates as at 2001, which was the initial (formative) age of telecommunication industry in India.  To quote an example, it was revealed that Swan Telecom which secured some contracts for frequencies for US$ 306 Million sold 40% of its stake to Etisalat for US$839 Million within a few months. Exposure of these deals led to investigations by the Auditor General and many other probes.  The Centre of Public Interest Litigation and Subramaniam Swamy moved Supreme Court of India, resulting in cancelling all the 122 illegally entered contracts.  The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has taken over the investigations and the Minister, his secretary and many other VVIPs including the daughter of Karunanidhi were arrested and are now facing prosecution. Not to mention, the CEOs of several companies are also being prosecuted for their corrupt conduct.  Though corruption took place, they were virtually caught and are being prosecuted.  Can it ever happen here?     Read More

Monday, June 11, 2012

Groundviews

Groundviews





      9 Jun, 2012
Photo courtesy Virakesari, via dbsjeyaraj.com
From its inception in late 1949 as the Tamil Federal Party, the Ilankai Thamil Arasu Kadchi(ITAK) – a party which, as the late Lakshman Kadirgamar once claimed in Parliament, was founded by a “dedicated group of principled men” – has been in the forefront of Sri Lankan (and Tamil) politics. It has come to play a dominant role in the writing of different chapters of Sri Lanka’s post-independence political story. The recent speech delivered by Mr. R. Sampanthan at the 14th Annual ITAK Convention (May, 2012) marks the opening of a new chapter, or the beginning of an important and critical phase of post-war Sri Lankan politics. What could be the impact of this speech? In a polarized and fragmented political context, how do we first make sense of what was said, without rushing to oppose it? How might it influence Sri Lankan politics in the future, and in particular, the course and relevance of Tamil and Sinhala nationalist politics in particular?
Domestic Dimension (“Political Solution”)
Mr. Sampanthan makes it clear that there is an intention to reach a settlement within a united Sri Lanka. The basic framework of his proposed solution is well known. The solution, inter alia: is to be “based on a political structure outside that of a unitary government, in a united Sri Lanka”; should not compromise the “position that the North and the East of Sri Lanka are the areas of historical habitation of the Tamil speaking people”; should provide “meaningful devolution” (constitutionally guaranteed) that goes “beyond the 13th Amendment” (13A); and should be “acceptable to the Muslim community.”

The readers' editor on… an unhappy clash of editorial and commercial content

The Guardian

Chris ElliottThe appearance of a promotional supplement paid for by Sri Lanka in the same edition as a story detailing claims of torture by the country's security personnel was far from serendipitous

  guardian.co.uk

Sri Lanka's civil war, in which tens of thousands of people were killed over a period of 26 years, ended just three years ago. Since then Sri Lanka has been fending off allegations of human rights abuses against its Tamil population to restore its image around the world. Both faces of the country were on show on the same day in the Guardian in what many readers thought was at best a bizarre juxtaposition and at worst an example of crassness or hypocrisy.
A front-page story on 6 June, under the headline "Tamils deported to Sri Lanka being tortured, victim claims", laid out detailed allegations that Britain is forcibly deporting asylum seekers who are then tortured in Sri Lanka.
Much of the detail was provided by the testimony of one man who claims he was left scarred and suicidal after a two-week ordeal. The former member of the Tamil Tigers' intelligence service said he was tortured by Sri Lankan security personnel after the Home Office deported him and two dozen other asylum seekers in June 2011. He escaped by bribing his guards, and again fled to London, where he is making another claim for asylum.
Publication of his story – which turned to page 6, accompanied by a graphic picture of the scars on his back – followed a high court decision a week before that halted the deportation of 40 people to Sri Lanka at the last minute, citing human rights concerns. Later that day, Mahinda Rajapaksa, the country's president, had to cancel a speech in the City of London after concerns about the threat of large demonstrations by Tamil rights groups.
It was a powerful story, which was why readers were puzzled when they found a 24-page supplement on Sri Lanka funded by the country's government distributed with the same issue. The supplement's producers ran the following disclaimer down the side of its front-page illustration: "An independent supplement distributed in the Guardian on behalf ofThe Report Company, who takes sole responsibility for its content. Our sponsors have no control over the content of this editorially-led supplement."
The headline on the front cover is "Sri Lanka. Asia's next wonder?", and the supplement's clear focus is – unsurprisingly – to promote the country. The civil war is addressed. The first feature, headlined "The place to be", suggests in a standfirst that "after three years of peace, old wounds are beginning to heal". President Rajapaksa was interviewed for the supplement, and in it he talks of being able to convince the world in the next few years that "Sri Lanka is truly the emerging wonder of Asia".
Human rights issues are also addressed. GL Peiris, Sri Lanka's minister of external affairs, "bemoans a 'very sharp, almost obsessive focus on the human rights issue'" that he says is driven by the influential Sri Lankan diaspora and what the author of the article calls "a sometimes sensationalist media".
As one reader put it: "Wonderful juxtaposition of today's page one headline … and the front cover of your special supplement … Serendipity or what?"
I take the point, but it could not be anything less like serendipity, the occurrence or development of events by chance in a happy or beneficial way, as the New Oxford Dictionary puts it. However, I think this unhappy accident is at least clear evidence that the editorial content of the Guardian is not influenced by commercial considerations.
Sponsored country supplements have been distributed with Britishnewspapers for many years. Until two years ago, such supplements in the Guardian would only appear after the commercial department that deals with them had had discussions with colleagues in editorial, but this practice has slipped. It will now be restored to ensure that there is a fuller picture of any problems with any country being considered for such a supplement.
Although the disclaimer on the supplement says the Guardian is not responsible for the content, the act of distribution by the newspaper lends a perception of endorsement – probably more so than a normal advert would – and the opportunity this affords to governments is not one we should provide lightly, if at all.
It is entirely reasonable that Sri Lanka wants to put the past behind it, but the evidence of our front-page story shows that it has not done so, and we should not have distributed this supplement.

Emerging pattern of SL judicial proceedings needs perusal


TamilNet[TamilNet, Monday, 11 June 2012, 19:26 GMT]
When gunmen killed the Changkaanai temple priest in 2010, the commander of the occupying Sinhala military in Jaffna, Maj. Gen. Hathurusinghe, first accused former LTTE cadres, later said SL Army gun borrowed from corrupt troops was used by former LTTE carders, and subsequently all the arrested - two SLA personnel and two alleged former militants were released by the courts. A pattern is now seen in producing cases in the courts related to the murder of two Eezham Tamils, a UK deportee and a Canadian citizen in Trincomalee and in Ki'linochchi. Media in Colombo is busy in highlighting the SL prosecution version of personal motivation, once again involving SL military personnel in one case and former militants in the other, to exclude the responsibility of top SL military command. 

The anxiety seen in the SL prosecution to come out with a bundle of contradicting evidence and the agitation seen in the SL government-run or regime-supporting Colombo media in attacking alternative media that comes out with ground facts, are just because the cases involve two Western countries with the presence of a large Tamil diaspora. 

It became important that the genocidal military establishment of Sri Lanka and the abetting establishments have to be exonerated.

Just a few days before the Ki'linochchi murder of the Canadian citizen, 28-year-old Sivarooban Sivagnanam, returning from Qatar was brutally slayed by a squad at Vathiri junction in Jaffna, very near to a SL military camp. May be because he was a West Asian returnee, no 'international' or Colombo media took any notice. The victim posthumously escaped from some woman coming into his case and some 'former LTTE cadres' also escaped from getting arrested.  Full story >>

Joan Smith: We wine and dine dictators who should be deposed


The IndependentSUNDAY 10 JUNE 2012

The choice in Syria may be military action or civil war

Day after day, evidence of fresh massacres emerges in Syria. On Friday, journalists finally got access to a village in the province of Hama where they found evidence of a bloodbath, but this region is no stranger to bloodshed. The current president's uncle launched an all-out assault on the city of Hama 30 years ago, bombing it from the air and killing many thousands of civilians. Those who survived were finished off by troops who advanced into the shattered city, just as Assad-supporting shabiha are accused of doing in village after village in recent weeks.
In the past few months, Syria has hardly been out of the headlines, but the 1982 Hama massacre attracted little attention outside the country. The old dictator, Hafez al-Assad, was left largely to his own devices, except when he became a little too generous in his support for international terrorism, while his son Bashar was feted in Downing Street by Tony Blair in 2002. It was one of a series of initiatives in which Blair tried to build cordial relations with Arab despots, in the mistaken belief that treating them like legitimate heads of state would persuade them to amend their behaviour. It didn't work with the younger Assad or Colonel Gaddafi, who continued to torture and murder his own people until he was overthrown with the help of a Nato bombing campaign last year.
Given David Cameron's role in that mission, it is surprising that his government hasn't yet learnt from Blair's kid-gloves treatment of leaders with poor human rights records. Last month, ministers did nothing as the Queen unwisely lunched with the King of Bahrain at Windsor Castle. Last week at a lunch in London she met the President of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa. He is accused of presiding over grotesque human rights abuses by government forces in the final days of Sri Lanka's civil war, including the discovery of bound and stripped female bodies, almost certainly rape victims. Protesters jeered Rajapaksa's car as it arrived in Pall Mall, and he was forced to cancel a keynote speech in the City of London for which guests had paid £795.
Downing Street swiftly released an account of Cameron's conversation with Rajapaksa, insisting that the Prime Minister had raised the question of human rights abuses, but the damage was done. Appearing at events such as the jubilee is a PR gift to heads of state with poor human rights records, giving the impression that they're just like any world leader. It also encourages a sense of impunity, as Fred Carver, director of the Sri Lanka campaign, pointed out last week. "It is likely Assad learnt some lessons from the way the international community tolerated civilian casualties in Sri Lanka," he said. "What lessons will Assad learn from seeing how quickly the international community rehabilitates those responsible?"
It's a lesson the younger Assad learnt a long time ago. After a brief experiment in relaxing his father's harsh regime, Bashar quickly reverted to type. Political prisoners were hideously tortured in prisons on the outskirts of Damascus and at Tadmur, while his glamorous British wife provided a diversion for a largely uncritical foreign press. The new president made so many enemies that it was a near-certainty that his own people would one day turn on him, with extremely bloody consequences. What we're witnessing is a fight to the death between a hardened cadre of Assad loyalists, who have benefited from his profoundly corrupt regime, and a brave but divided opposition.
We feel like helpless observers as news of fresh atrocities emerges. But public anger is ineffectual as long as the UN is hampered by the intransigence of Russia and China, and the danger of a regional conflict involving Iran can't be brushed aside. It's also difficult for democratic nations to know which factions of the opposition to support when most are unknown quantities. Two days ago, a Foreign Office minister, Alistair Burt, called on opposition groups to unite, but it's not easy to see how this clearly desirable end can be achieved. Some are religious, others secular, and a single unifying leader has yet to emerge. Western governments are in a frustrating situation; they know that millions want them to do something to stop the bloodshed in Syria, but they simply don't know enough about what's going on inside the country.
There's now a powerful argument for heads of government with poor human rights records to be ostracised, instead of invited to grand lunches and dinners. It's good news that British ministers will not attend the initial stages of Euro 2012 because of Ukraine's treatment of the jailed opposition leader, Yulia Tymoshenko, but the Government should announce a boycott of the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Sri Lanka unless President Rajapaksa cooperates with an independent investigation into alleged war crimes in the country. Future leaders should be identified and helped to build an effective opposition inside or outside despotic regimes.
Western governments have spent too much time appeasing nasty governments. Assad plans to kill as many opponents as possible, and the best hope may be that China and Russia realise he's fuelling a sectarian conflict and ditch him. But the choice may come down to international military intervention or civil war.

Ushering Social Justice As Development Philosophy


June 11, 2012 By W.A. Wijewardena  -
Dr. W.A. Wijewardena
Colombo TelegraphThe development philosophy of the present Government, as pronounced in the Annual Report of the Ministry of Finance and Planning for 2011 released two weeks ago, is a blend of social justice with economic progress (p 14). This is a laudable goal which goes well with the current development thinking of the world.
The Ministry report has further clarified its philosophy as one that does not concentrate merely on the economic progress. Instead, it will endeavour to bring prosperity to Sri Lanka by developing social, cultural, religious and environmental aspects as well. It has prided itself on being first to introduce this philosophy to Sri Lanka.
All past development philosophies of Sri Lanka, according to the Ministry of Finance, have been either growth without social justice or social justice without growth. For instance, the policy package adopted prior to 2005, the year in which the incumbent President Mahinda Rajapaksa took office as President of the country, had been biased toward economic progress at the expense of social justice.
The reference here is to the policy adopted by Sri Lanka since 1977 when the country moved to a free market economy policy till the installation of the incumbent President in 2005. Then the policy package which had been adopted by the country prior to 1977 had been on the opposite side.
The Ministry has branded it as a policy that had tried to establish social progress at the cost of economic progress. Hence, according to the Ministry Report, the period since 2005 offers a unique case where both economic progress and social justice have been blended together thereby carving out a more holistic path for the nation to tread on.
Incidentally, in a substantial part of the period prior to 2005 and 1977, it was the same political force that rules the country today that had tried to implement the economic philosophies of these two polar ends which have now been condemned by the Ministry of Finance as inappropriate for Sri Lanka’s destiny.
Government’s strategy: Attain high economic growth                                    Read More
Gotabhaya to be appointed as Prime Minister
Monday, 11 June 2012
The President has decided to appoint Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa to the post of Prime Minister since Premier D.M. Jayaratne is unable to carry out his duties.
Prime Minister Jayaratne has now returned to the country after receiving treatment at Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Hospital, but several specialist doctors have said the Premier was not of sound memory.
Several attempts by the President to hold a Cabinet reshuffle in the past few months had to be postponed due to the clash over the appointment of the next prime Minister.
However, the President has decided to hold a Cabinet reshuffle after the conclusion of three provincial council elections this year Gotabhaya Rajapaksa is to be appointed to the post.
The President has had a lengthy discussion on the matter with a few of his close friends after returning to the country from his tour in the UK and Italy. A head of a state bank, several lawyers and one of the President’s brothers in-law have participated in the discussion.
The President has said he did not have confidence in Ministers Maithripala Sirisena and Nimal Siripala de Silva to be appointed as Prime Minster although they were senior members of the SLFP and that First Lady Shiranthi and the sons did not approve of either Basil or Chamal Rajapaksa being appointed to the post.
The President has said that although he had thought of appointing Minster Dinesh Gunawardena as the next Premier, the Defence Secretary had shown files about Gunawardena’s corrupt dealings.
All those who had participated in the discussion have asked the President to be mindful of son Namal Rajapaksa’s political future when choosing the next Prime Minister.
The President had agreed and said that his wife and children were agreeable to appointing Gotabhaya as Prime Minister.
It was then decided to appoint Gotabhaya to parliament from the National List after asking National List MP Janaka Bandara to resign. Gotabhaya would then be appointed as the Minister of Urban Development, Buddhist and Cultural Affairs and Deputy Minister of Defence.
The President has also said that he has decided to get National List MPs Malini Fonseka, Kamala Ranatunge, J.R.P. Suriyapperuma and Prof. Rajeeva Wijesinghe to resign in order to appoint several intellectuals to parliament. He has added that one of the new appointees would be appointed as the External Affairs Minister.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

http://salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgJun-10-2012

Ban Ki-moon Advisers Defend Sri Lanka Crimes By Linking Press with LTTE, France Smells Blood?


This is the UN itself, at the highest level, fanning anti press freedom flames. - Inner City Press
Silva's photo inset with his handiwork
Silva's photo inset with his handiwork. Photo: eelamenews.com
(UNITED NATIONS) - Amid threatening anonymous telephone calls triggered by a proceeding at the UN against Inner City Press, on June 7 a Sri Lankan journalist askedInner City Press, "there is wide spread allegation that you have been funded by pro Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam LTTE lobby groups during the last few years. How do you react to that allegation?"
As Inner City Press was, in part for self-protection, seeking to end the public witch hunt against it by offering a balanced mutual apology, it could not on June 7 answer as directly as now. Instead the Sri Lankan journalist was told, and reported.
"I reject these funding allegations which are made by Sinhalese extremists, including in the Sri Lankan government, against anyone who raises the issue of the killing of civilians in May 2009. I am troubled that some in UN SG Ban Ki-moon's administration, who feel Inner City Press' coverage has made Ban look bad, including for accepting General Shavendra Silva as an adviser, are known to have echoed or amplified these Sinhalese extremist claims."
What does this last line mean? Well, advisers close to Ban Ki-moon now and before he became Secretary General have said, as a defense, that Inner City Press is funded by the LTTE.
Other UN officials have told Inner City Press that that the allegation of LTTE funding has been bandied around in decision making meetings.
This is the UN itself, at the highest level, fanning anti press freedom flames.
On June 3 the largest English langauge newspaper in Sri Lanka reported, "if the allegations against Lee are proven, the UN headquarters will be made out of bounds for him. If the harassment charges are proven he could face a jail term of up to six years." See,http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2012/06/03/new11.asp
After Ban's Media Accreditation and Liaison Unit three times said it would renew Inner City Press accreditation to cover the UN, including in this context, on June 4 it reverse course and said no. What has the response to this been?
A week ago, Inner City Press wrote to Ken Roth of Human Rights Watch, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the chief editors of Reuters (Stephen Adler) and Bloomberg (Matthew Winkler) and then UNESCO.
Inner City Press raised to these and others the fact that Inner City Press is being targeted by pro government Sri Lanka media, with stories now using information from the Sri Lankan Mission led by Permanent Representative Palitha Kohona and citing his deputy General Shavendra Silva. The stories also quote a letter and e-mails from the UN Correspondents Association, whose president Giampaolo Pioli accepted money as rent from Kohona and then refused to recuse himself.
So far, despite an inquiry with HRW's Richard Dicker outside a press conference by outgoing International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo, there has been no response at all from Roth and HRW, nor from Adler or Reuters, nor Winkler or Bloomberg.
Inner City Press wrote to the editor of another UNCA officer, and the only response was to be hauled again in front of UNCA and berated for having dared write to the officer's editor.
When shown virulent Sri Lanka government media attacks on Inner City Press, the UNCA officer said "I don't care about that." The Reutersbureau chief turned over one such article handed to him, before Inner City Press was told it was summarily "suspended" from UNCA.
CPJ responded in writing that it is (too) busy; at a recent "protection of journalists" event sponsored by the French Mission at the UN, Inner City Press asked CPJ's director about the disappearance of Sri Lankan journalist Prageeth, without answer.
The French mission has used "its" representative on UNCA, Tim Witcher of Agence France Presse, to push and vote to expel Inner City Press. Now, do they smell blood?
Others have said they will look into it, and still others will be asked. Luis Moreno Ocampo, when he spotted one of the Sri Lanka articles, took an interest and opined why "they want you out." What he will do is not yet known.
A journalist who daily covers not only Sri Lanka but also Sudan, Syria, Western Sahara, the Congo and UN corruption shouldn't need to go to such lengths to be allowed to continue to cover the UN. But this is Ban Ki-moon's UN, But this is Ban Ki-moon's UN, seen through the fun house mirror of the UNCA "Pioli's Playhouse."
How has the Northern economy fared since the end of the war?



 
article_image

By R.M.B Senanayake

At a recent seminar on the peace dividend, the speaker Dr Muttukrishna Sarvanandan drew attention to the fact that the share of government services which includes defense services is a high of 53% in the Northern Province. He was quoting from the Provincial GDP data prepared by the Department of Census & Statistics and published by the Central Bank given below. He said more than half of the northern provincial economy was accounted for by "Government Services" in 2009 which was referred to as "Public Administration, Other Government Services, and Defense" until 2007. The latest composition of the provincial GDP data is available for 2010. In fact, the share of Public Administration, Other Government Services, and Defense in the northern economy has increased from 38% in 2003, to 49% in 2006, 2007 and 2008, and further to 53% in 2009," he said. I could not find this data quoted by Dr Sarvanandan.

GDP of the Northern Province       Read more...

Why Bishop Joseph And His Roman Catholic Clergy Have Been Targeted


June 11, 2012

Dr. Brian Senewiratne
In an extensive article, now expanded into a booklet and sent to the Pope, and others, I drew attention to the threats to Bishop Rayappu Joseph, the (Tamil) Roman Catholic Bishop of Mannar, members of his clergy (Tamils), members of (Tamil) ‘Civil Society’, and even Sinhalese human rights activists and journalists in the Sinhalese South, by the Government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, and some of his very violent Ministers.
The ‘crime’ committed by Bishop Joseph
For those who have not read the earlier article, I will summarise the reasons why Bishop Joseph and his Roman Catholic clergy in Mannar have been targeted. What have they done?
1. Bishop Joseph has looked after his flock – not just Catholic Christians, but Christians of all denominations, non-Christians, and others. The Bible says that they are all God’s children – which Bishop Joseph has applied absolutely.
As one of his clergy (Fr Jeyabalan Croos), in an appeal to the local people has put it, “…the Bishop of Mannar who in the spirit of the Prophets of the Bible and following the footsteps of our Great Master Jesus Christ acted as the “voice of the voiceless” people of Mannar and in the whole of North and East, and also in the whole island of Sri Lanka.”
 He is not only the leader of the Catholic diocese in Mannar, but a humanitarian, which is why his ‘elimination’ will affect us all.
2.   Bishop Joseph, his clergy and members of ‘civil society’ have committed four ‘crimes’, in the eyes of the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL).
  1. Made a Submission to the LLRC (the so-called Lessons Learnt and Rehabilitation Commission of the GoSL).
  2. Contacted the US Officials from the State Department who arrived in Sri Lanka in February 2012 and apprised them of the humanitarian problems of the Tamil people in the North and East, and the expectations (and responsibilities) of the UN Human Rights Council (UN HRC).
  3. Made a direct Submission to the UN HRC in March 2012, with 31 Christian clergy in the Sri Lankan North.
  4. Sent a response to the UN HRC, setting out the downright lies presented to the UN HRC by the GoSL (Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe), and the real situation on the ground in the Tamil North and East.
I have dealt with these in detail in my earlier publication. Here is a summary:
We have given the right to build condominiums

(Lanka-e-News-09.June.2012,11.55PM) Minister Patali Champika Ranawak during a meeting in Homagama said that the government has given more than the equal rights to the Tamils living in Kollupitiya and Wellawatta to build condominium houses in the marine drive. He said the rights to build condominiums were given during the period of successive Sri Lankan governments and not by Pirabakaran in the Vanni.

I should teach Paatali Champika that it is not the right to build condominiums but it is the simple right disallowing to sing the national anthem in Tamil.

The minister is suffering from a memory syndrome for a very long time that he has forgotten that it was in this same Wellawatta during the 1983 communal riots which burnt thousands of Tamils into death. Further he does not know the difference between the fundamental rights of an ethnicity. I don’t know whether this minister knows that no compensation was given for the loss of lives and properties during these communal riots where thousands of Tamils were burnt inside houses and properties looted. I wish to ask Champika did the so called patriotism of Champika Ranawaka bring the perpetrators of 1983 communal riots into account.

I doubt whether this minister was among the clan during the time where Tamil youths were stripped naked in the pavements of Colombo during 1983 which is similar to stripping of the dead bodies of the Tamil women LTTE carders. Being a Buddhist I feel shame for the atrocities committed by the Singhalese during the 1983 communal violence. I don’t know the kind of amusement you get surrounding and looking the nude body of a female dead corpse. There is nothing much for this Singhalese minister to blabber about communal hatred because these are the ministers who are descendents of the endemic Sinha (lion) tribe. I wish if this minister would have watched the program of Ven Dambara Amila in the Ya TV so that he can differentiate the difference between a Buddhist and a Singhalese.

Ministers like Champika and Wimal Weerawansa should come out from the tribal community and think this is not a country owned by Singhalese and other communities to live as visitors. If this minister says that Tamil people in Kandy, Negombo and Wattala are living together with harmony it is the coexistence of the people and nothing to boast for a politician like Champika who disallow to sing the national anthem in Tamil.

If it is to bring communal harmony there should be justice met first. I don’t know why politicians like Champika and Weerawansa are frightened about the word accountability. As a matter of fact Sri Lanka is a country which survives under foreign aid, World Bank and IMF loans; it is not a secret how we kneel in front of IMF regulations to cover the budget deficit. At a situation like this we should be mature, civilized and professional and be transparent to handle any accountability issue which affects our integrity. Blabbering about condominium rights in political arena we become jokers when dealing with international politics.
We should be able to prove our credibility in a way safeguarding our integrity and sovereignty of our nation. It may be the endemic quality of the lion in the jungle not to be accountable when hunting a life of another animal but we are living in a civilized society in the 21st century where humans are bonded with humanity and justice. If we see an injustice happening for a fellow human as a Sri Lankan we should be able to raise our voice against the injustice despite he is a Singhalese, Muslim, Tamil or a Christian. If anyone can raise a question what about the crimes done by the LTTE? The answer is very simple if the government can bring K.P and Karuna into accountability for alleged war crimes.

The present generation should know there are many incidents in the past that crimes not brought into justice and accountability. We are not lions living in the jungle we are civilized humans with sixth sense living in cities coexisting with fellow humans. We have to come out from the endemic tribal behavior and get assimilate by means of education, spirituality and practice preached by Lord Buddah not to get instigate for speeches of Weerawansa and Champika and be provocative and brutal until we feel the smell of human flesh.
Robinhood
Rajapakse in London By Westminster Insider

Sunday, 10 June 2012 

Rajapakse had to cloak his arrival in London by taking security measures unprecedented since the end of the civil war and retreat by cutting short his stay.
At 18:00 BST (British Summer Time) on the 3rd of June, Scotland Yard informed activists that Rajapakse will not arrive on Sri Lankan Airlines flight UL503 at terminal 4 of London’s Heathrow airport (LHR) but the next day instead. Organisers of the demonstration at LHR knew both the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and BAA, the operator of LHR had granted Rajapakse VIP clearance, and, therefore, were unlikely to intercept him at the terminal. Nevertheless, they went ahead with it to send a message that countenancing Rajapakse on British soil was not acceptable. Over seven hundred activists converged on LHR and mounted one of the biggest demonstrations inside an airport terminal. To their surprise Scotland Yard firearms officers encouraged them saying they too would do the same if their families had suffered like Tamils. 
At 06:30 hours on the 4th June Scotland Yard informed activists that Rajapakse had departed Colombo. However, they did not reveal his time of arrival. Later that morning they reported that he was residing at the Hilton in Park Lane. Activists had been granted permission by Scotland Yard to mount a protest outside the Dorchester Hotel between 13:00 and 19:00 hours on the 4th, but changed it to the Hilton. The stage was set for another confrontation.