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

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Basil gets contract to convert Rupavahini systems to digital
Thursday, 28 June 2012

Arrangements have now been made to convert all broadcasting of Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation (SLRC) into digital technology and Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa is making an effort to secure this millions worth project.
The intellectual committee appointed to study the project and make proposals has said that BVBT 2 technology has to be used for this purpose. The committee has made the proposal saying it would practical since it is a technology used in other Asian countries and even in European countries. The relevant Cabinet memorandum had received the approval from the Cabinet of Ministers. Project proposals have now been called to select a company to carry out the project.
However, a special Japanese representative who has visited Sri Lanka on an invitation by Minister Basil Rajapaksa has asked that the project be handed over to his country. He has explained that it would only be fair to give the project to convert the SLRC system into digital to his country since it was Japan that initially built the Rupavahini.
A senior official from the SLRC said that the technology used in Japan is used only in Japan and North America and that many countries have discarded the technology claiming it is outdated. All countries have taken into the new BVBT 2 technology.
He added that if the Japanese technology is introduced to SLRC due to foreign pressure, the company would eventually have to face massive technical and financial issues in future.
However, the SLRC management and the Media Minister are now in a difficult spot since Minister Basil Rajapaksa is continuously insisting that the project to make the SLRC digital be handed over to the Japanese.
The local agent for the Japanese official, who was invited to the country by Basil, is well known businessman Sumal Perera’s Access Company. The millions of rupees given to Access through various projects by Basil have been invested in several projects carried out by Access.
It was Basil Rajapaksa who got China Harbor that constructed the Hambantota Port to Sri Lanka. Access was also the local agent for China Harbor.
China Harbor has been given many large scale development projects under Minister Basil Rajapaksa.

Three Years After Civil War Tamils In Sri Lanka Remain Isolated And Stigmatized


International Business Times
By PALASH R. GHOSH:    June 28, 2012 
Two boys walk past local government election campaign posters in Jaffna(Photo: Reuters)


Three years after a civil war between the Sri Lankan government and Tamil separatists, tens of thousands of Tamils in the country lack national identity cards (NIC), making it difficult for them to access public services and subjects them to police and army harassment.

In Sri Lanka, all citizens aged 16 or above are required to carry an NIC -- however, in 2009 during the final days of the deadly conflict between the Sri Lankan armed forces and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), many Tamils were displaced from their homes by the fighting and lost everything, including their identity papers.
BBC reported that more than 100,000 Tamils, who tend to concentrate in the northern region of the island nation, have either lost or damaged their identity cards. Moreover, in areas that were controlled by the LTTE during the civil war, such identity cards became meaningless as the Tamil rebels were seeking to form an independent nation anyway.


BBCSri Lanka's Tamils face identity crisis

The National Identity Card was introduced in Sri Lanka in 1972

Sri Lankan National Identity Card

27 June 2012
Without a national identity card, many Tamils in Sri Lanka cannot avail of basic services and it makes them suspect in the eyes of the police, writes Ponniah Manikavasagam of the BBC's Tamil service.
In a remote and dusty part of Kilinochchi district in the Tamil-dominated northern Sri Lanka, people gather around a group of officials working with an election monitoring service called the People's Action for Free and Fair Elections (Paffrel).
Sitting in the shade, out of the fierce mid-day heat, officials from Paffrel, along with various government and non-governmental organisations, discuss with local people the status of their National Identity Cards (NIC), a document which is a legal requirement for all citizens of 16 years or over.
Sri Lankan Tamils meet officials for their identity cardsTens of thousands of people were displaced in 2009 in the final chapter of the long conflict between the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the Sri Lankan military.
Tens of thousands of Tamils do not have an identity card      Full Story>>>
Hudson in hospital after Eliyantha White’s treatment
Thursday, 28 June 2012

Chairman of Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC), Hudson Samarasinghe has been hospitalized recently after being treated by Presidential physician, Eliyantha White. After receiving White’s treatment, Samarasinghe has suffered from internal bleeding and the President had directed that he be immediately admitted to the Apollo Hospital.
Samarasinghe had recovered after being treated a few days in the ICU, but he reportedly suffers from a poor memory. He has told people who had visited him in hospital never to receive any treatment from White and that he provided some intoxicating powder drug as treatment. Samarasinghe has added that he had a narrow shave with death.
Although Chief Government Whip Minister Dinesh Gunawardena said in parliament a few months back that Eliyantha White was not the President’s personal physician, has been assigned security personnel from the Ministerial Security Division (MSD).
The Silumina newspaper has recently reported that Eliyantha White is a medical advisor to the President. When a minister had questioned the editor of the newspaper about White being the President’s physician, the editor had responded saying the report that was published was sent by the President’s photographer, Sudath Silva.
'We even need permission to bury our dead': Sri Lanka's war legacy lingers
      guardian.co.uk
The GuardianPost-civil war Sri Lanka may be on an upward economic curve but, for Tamils in the north, military control remains a way of life
Tamil women in Mullaitivu, north-east Sri Lanka. Locals say the wait for justice and reconciliation continues. Photograph: Ishara S Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images
MDG : Sri Lanka Tamil women look on in the northeastern town of Mullaittivu
Three years after its civil war, Sri Lanka has emerged as a middle-income country on course to meet most of the millennium development goals. GDP rose by around 8% during 2011 and tourism is set to bring in more than $1bn this year. Yet this national success story obscures the tale of an unsettled north that remains under military control.
The northern Tamil districts of Jaffna, Kilinochchi, Mullaitivu, Mannar and Vavuniya lost three decades to conflict, which ended in the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) by government forces in May 2009. Although open warfare has ceased, and despite major government investment in the reconstruction of the region, Tamils say they are still waiting for justice and reconciliation.
Jutting out at the island's most northern tip, the Jaffna peninsula was largely cut off from the rest of Sri Lanka until 2009. Today, Jaffna still seems in a daze. Plants grow up through bullet holes and weeds have crept into gutted homes without roofs or residents.
With one soldier for every 10 civilians, life on the peninsula does not yet bear the hallmarks of peace. Tensions run high as the Sri Lankan army maintains tight control over the region through checkpoints and military bases. Following a meeting with Hillary Clinton in Washington, the external affairs ministry secretary Karunatilaka Amunugama, criticised international pressure to reduce the military presence. "Sri Lanka does not go to other countries and call on those countries to remove their troops from one place to another," he said. "It is simply not done because it is an internal matter."
Speaking on the third anniversary of the end of the civil war, President Mahinda Rajapaksa used his annual victory speech to defend the proliferation of military camps in the north and east against what he characterised as a backdrop of strong pro-LTTE activity in the diaspora.
In Jaffna, the animosity is palpable. "The military [are] supposed to have no administrative duties here," said Anpu, 22, a student who did not give his surname. "But they interfere every day; we even need their permission to bury our dead." Accusations of political abductions and the harassment of civilians continue. The destruction of symbolic Tamil sites – including a Jaffna graveyard containing the bodies of 2,000 LTTE fighters, which was bulldozed to make way for an army base in 2010 – has further strained the social fabric.
But despite the friction, the north is slowly reopening for business. The potholed road from the south, which was badly damaged during the war and closed to public vehicles until 2009, is undergoing improvements. It is still controlled by a gauntlet of military outposts and flanked by de-mining teams, but trade has started to benefit from a relaxation of permit restrictions.
According to the government, 98% of those displaced during the war have been resettled in "an environment of confidence and satisfaction". Although this statement overlooks issues with land rights and lagging mine clearance, it is clear that effort has been put into ensuring a support system for returnees.
Government funding has kickstarted much-needed modernisation of damaged and dilapidated water and sanitation systems in the north. In 2010, a report by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said less than 0.5% of residents in the Jaffna peninsula had access to piped water, compared with a country average of more than 32%. With a $164m cash injection from the ADB, L'Agence Française de Développement and the Sri Lankan government, that is set to change.
But a recent report by the Centre for Policy Alternatives said: "While the government has repeatedly expressed interest in developing a framework for reconciliation, there are also concerns that the government is opting for a postwar model of economic development to consolidate peace rather than substantively address issues of democracy, a political solution, human rights and accountability."
"A lot of people feel that if you address the economic issues the rest will fall into place," says Priyanthi Fernando, executive director of the Colombo-based Centre for Poverty Analysis. "But it needs to be a mix of practical solutions to immediate problems and being able to go behind those practicalities to understand the root of the conflict."
Export-oriented, the next chapter in Sri Lanka's economy will rely heavily on foreign support. The UN Human Rights Council resolution adopted in March has stepped up pressure on the Sri Lankan government to investigate allegations of war crimes by troops in the final months of the war and act on the conclusions of the commission of inquiry on lessons learnt and reconcillation. Among those recommendations is the suggestion: "The military presence must progressively recede to the background to enable the people to return to normal civilian life and enjoy the benefits of peace."
"This infrastructure will not be accepted as a trade-off for our rights," says Anpu. "And it will not overwrite the need for the justice for our dead."

‘Sri Lankan Navy should stop harassing fishermen’

Return to frontpageCHENNAI, June 28, 2012 

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa writes to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on the plight of Indian fishermen "traditionally fishing" in contentious Katchatheevu.
Observing that Indian fishermen hailing from Tamil Nadu have been “traditionally fishing” in contentious Katchatheevu, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa on Thursday urged Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to ask Colombo to stop its navy from harassing them.
Referring to the latest incident, she said fishermen in 45 boats fishing near Katchatheevu on June 26 were harassed by Sri Lankan Navy personnel.
They reportedly chased the fishermen away after cutting the ropes and damaging nets of 10 boats, resulting in a huge loss to the fishermen, she said in a letter to Dr. Singh.
“You are aware that I have brought to your kind attention the various incidents of attack on Indian fishermen from Tamil Nadu by the Sri Lankan Navy/miscreants within the past 12 months and sought your intervention,” she said.
This latest incident of harassment has shocked the state of Tamil Nadu and created a “psychological fear” in the minds of the fishermen, she said.
“I wish to reiterate that from time immemorial fishermen of Tamil Nadu have been traditionally fishing in the waters near Katchatheevu, notwithstanding any geographical or political boundaries,” she said.
The Chief Minister requested Singh to take up the issue with Sri Lanka and impress upon them the need to instruct their Navy to exercise restraint and refrain from harassing “innocent” Indian fishermen pursuing their livelihood in their traditional waters, she said.
Katchatheevu, an islet on the Palk Straits, was ceded to Sri Lanka by India in 1974.
Sri Lanka has been objecting to Tamil Nadu fishermen fishing in that area.





Population plunge in Sri Lanka’s Tamil base


2012-06-27
COLOMBO - Sri Lanka's first national census in 30 years has shown a dramatic 20 percent drop in the population of the Jaffna peninsula, the long-time base of Tamil rebels during the island's ethnic conflict.
According to a preliminary census report released Wednesday, the population in Jaffna, which the rebels once ran as a de facto separate state in the northeast, had fallen from 734,000 in 1981 to 583,000.
Work on the census began last year.
The report offered no analysis, but a Tamil legislator in the national parliament said it reflected an exodus during the fighting between Tamil rebels and government forces from 1972 to 2011 that claimed an estimated 100,000 lives.
"Our estimate is that out of the one million Tamils who fled the fighting and are living abroad, at least 80 percent were from Jaffna," said Suresh Premachandran.
"If not for the war, the population in Jaffna would have been over 1.4 million," he added.
One likely consequence of the new census figures will be a reduction in ethnic Tamil minority representation in the national parliament, which is dominated by members of the Sinhalese majority.
Seats in the 225-member parliament are allocated on the basis of a region's population. Nine seats are currently allocated for Jaffna, but Premachandran said that would now drop to six.
The census put the national population at 20.27 million, about 600,000 down on estimates based on a sample survey carried out in 2001.
Sri Lanka's ethnic conflict ended in May 2009, with the final defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) by government forces.
NOWWOW, the new kid on the block
Logo
New Opportunities for Wounded, Widowed and Orphans of War – that’s the groundbreaking new charity out there!
Anyone who had been glancing through the many pages of web-based news media for the latest developments on the home front couldn’t have missed out on the poignant story presented in reporting and pictures of a group of poor kids of Kilinochchi proudly posing with their new bikes presented to them by the Member of Parliament Mr. Sivagnanam Shritharan, thanks to the initiative of a North American Charity called New Opportunities for Wounded, Widowed and Orphans of War (NOWWOW). The students who live far away from their schools will now have an impetus not to miss out on the classes. NOWWOW feels that it has made use of an excellent opportunity to ensure that the hopes and dreams for the future of Vanni don’t falter due to negligence. NOWWOW is the new kid on the block, but it is determined to cater to the livelihood of one widow at a time, the future prospects of one student at a time, the care and parenting support for one orphan at a time and medical help for one disabled at a time.    full story |

SOS of Eezham Tamils seeks global Tamils, world humanity to respond

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 27 June 2012, 19:20 GMT]
Mu’l’livaaykkaal was only a beginning for the Sinhala State and its international abetters to perpetuate genocide of Eezham Tamils to suit overlapping agendas. After three years of Colombo’s accelerated structural genocide facilitated by the international community of establishments, the Tamil leaders in the island have once again voiced an SOS in unison on Tuesday, appealing to global Tamils and global community of humanity, to intervene and save their nation from militarised annihilation. Gagged, but experiencing the realities of the hoodwink of ‘post-war reconciliation,’ the voices coming from the island show better clarity and bearing, compared to the hijacked diaspora confused over where to address the issue and a Tamil Nadu leadership silent after a resolution that doesn’t address fundamental solutions, political observers in the island said. 

Thirumu'rika'ndi

Leaders and representatives of different political parties, TNA, TNPF, TULF, DPF and Sinhala representatives of USP and NSSP along with affected Tamil civilians staged a demonstration at Thirumu'rika'ndi in Vanni on Tuesday against land grab and militarised annihilation of the nation of Eezham Tamils. 

While on one hand the agent State in Colombo is engaged in genocidal land grab, its international abettors on the other, aim for large scale land grab in the island. In the process, they facilitate each other. 

What is now voiced in the island is in sharp contrast to what the parliamentarians of New Delhi, section of Chennai based media, former peace facilitators and international crisis managers at the behest of the US Establishment try to hoodwink the world public opinion and try to blunt the struggling spirit of the diaspora, the political observers in the island said. 

Extracts of the speeches made by the leaders of the demonstration along with their voice recordings, are given here for the diaspora, Tamils in Tamil Nadu and the global community of humanity to grasp what is happening in the island and to plan out an appropriate global strategy to meet the situation:
Selvarajah Kajendren (TNPF):
Selvarajah Kajendren at Thirumu'rika'ndi on 26 June 2012 by TamilNet

Protest at Thirumu'rika'ndi
Mano Ganesan (DPF):
ano Ganesan at Thirumu'rika'ndi on 26 June 2012 by TamilNet

S. Sritharan (ITAK, TNA):


Mavai Senathiraja (ITAK, TNA):
ritharan and Mavai Senathirajah at Thirumu'rika'ndi by TamilNet

Suresh Premachandran (EPRLF, TNA): 
Suresh Premachandran at Thirumu'rika'ndi on 26 June 2012 by TamilNet




Protest at Thirumu'rika'ndi
M.K. Sivajilingam (TELO, TNA):




MK Sivajilingam at Thirumu'rika'ndi 26 June 2012 by TamilNet

 Full story >>

Wednesday, June 27, 2012


BBCQueen and Martin McGuinness shake hands

27 June 2012
The Queen shook hands with former IRA commander Martin McGuinness.

Video


The final day of the Queen's two-day visit to Northern Ireland was marked by an historic handshake and a huge party.
The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh were driven through the grounds of StormontHer Majesty and former IRA commander Martin McGuinness shook hands for the first time.
The meeting between the monarch and Northern Ireland's deputy first minister took place at a charity event in Belfast on Wednesday morning.
In the afternoon she attended a Diamond Jubilee party attended by 20,000 in Stormont.
The Queen and Mr McGuinness shook hands at a private meeting and later shook hands in public.

Refugees for 20 Years, Tamil Catholic Families Forced to Live in the Jungle

http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg



Refugees in Sri Lanka
Refugees in Sri Lanka, courtesy: asianews.it










WikiLeaks:‘There Will Be No Investigation, No One Will Be Able To Find Out What Happened To Keith’ – Gota


Colombo TelegraphJune 27, 2012

By Colombo Telegraph-
“Rajapaksa reportedly went on to say that the investigation of the Noyahr incident would lead nowhere. ‘There will be no investigation. It will reach a certain point and stop. No one will be able to find out what happened.’ He castigated journalists in general for focusing attention on Sri Lanka’s human rights record. ‘Human rights mean nothing. We do not want to be bothered about it while we’re fighting a war. Because of the international campaign, we can’t arrest anyone. But I don’t care; I will do what I want. The military will campaign for criminal defamation laws to stop all this. The fundamental rights provisions of the Constitution have to be repealed.’”the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
‘Human rights mean nothing. We do not want to be bothered about it while we're fighting a war. Because of the international campaign, we can't arrest anyone. But I don't care; I will do what I want.
Secretary to the ministry of Defence Gotabhaya Rajapaksa made above remarks with Sanath Balasooriya and Poddala jayantha , the president and the secretary of Sri Lanka Working Journalists Association.
The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database dated June 2, 2008. The cable is classified as “CONFIDENTIAL” and written by the US Ambassador to Colombo Robert Blake. The cable details the media suppression situation just after the abduction and beating of defense journalist Keith Noyahr. The cable also details a meeting Secretary to the ministry of Defence Gotabhaya Rajapaksa and two media workers Sanath Balasooriya and Poddala jayantha has had with.
Related posts:
Below we give the relevant part of the confidential cable;
REF: COLOMBO 507 
Classified By: AMBASSADOR ROBERT O. BLAKE, JR. REASONS: 1.4(b,d). 
1.  (C) SUMMARY: The Defense Secretary summoned two media
workers from the government-owned publishing house.  He
reportedly harangued them for over two hours for
participating in a rally to protest the abduction and beating
of defense journalist Keith Noyahr.  The journalists told us
that Gothabaya told them that "groups that revere Army
Commander Fonseka" would kill them if they persisted in their
campaign for media freedom.  Five media organizations
released a letter to the Defense Secretary deploring his
actions.  Several other journalists reported surveillance,
harassment and intimidation by shadowy groups likely linked
to the Defense Ministry.  The CEO of the independent
newspaper Noyahr works for has fled the country.  The paper's
editor told us he fears for his life and for his family and
may seek temporary refuge abroad.  The paper's majority owner
is reportedly negotiating to divest his shares in the
company.  Government spokesmen have generally been dismissive
of the threats to the media.  The Defense Ministry will
reportedly seek draconian censorship and criminal defamation
legislation to shut down any criticism of the government's
conduct of the war.  The campaign against media critics of
the administration appears aimed at discovering their sources
within the military's disgruntled officer corps and is likely
linked to the Army Commander's effort to gain another
extension of his term beyond the normal retirement age.  End
summary.
¶6.  (C) Rajapaksa reportedly went on to say that the investigation of the Noyahr incident would lead nowhere. "There will be no investigation. It will reach a certain point and stop. No one will be able to find out what happened." He castigated journalists in general for focusing attention on Sri Lanka's human rights record. "Human rights mean nothing. We do not want to be bothered about it while we're fighting a war. Because of the international campaign, we can't arrest anyone. But I don't care; I will do what I want. The military will campaign for criminal defamation laws to stop all this. The fundamental rights provisions of the Constitution have to be repealed."
BLAKE


“The President’s media group attacking me” – Basil

Wednesday, 27 June 2012 
Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa says that a group of media personnel close to the President were continuously attacking him. He has made this comment to the head of Neth FM, Nihal Epa Seneviratne at the opening ceremony of an abode for monks at the Iyamporuwa Temple in Madiwela.
The Minister has made this comment in front of Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajaoaksa and the Navy Commander. Basil has said that the Belumgala programme on Neth FM had attacked him on several occasions and has said it was not justifiable to see the government being criticized by the media supportive of the government.
When Nihal Epa Seneviratne has tried to respond to the statement, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa had taken him away to another place. Basil had then told several senior journalists at the venue that even the Rivira newspaper that gets advertising from institutes under his purview continuously attacked him.
The Madiwela Iyamporuwa Temple in Madiwela is under the Chief Incumbent of the Los Angeles Buddhist temple, Ven. Aluthnuwara Sumanatissa Thero, who is a supporter of the Rajapaksas. The new abode for the monks was built by the Navy on a directive by Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
However, several senior journalists have inquired from the Rivira CEO, Gairuka Perusinghe about the comment made by Basil. He has said that he was following directives of the President. He has added that the Rivira newspaper company has decided not to publish nay news against the President, the First lady or the three children and that the President has given permission to write and criticize any other member of the government.