Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, July 21, 2012

SPINNER RAHUL SHARMA THROWN INTO JEOPARDY A S HE IS FOUND POSITIVE FOR DRUGS
Saturday, 21 July 2012

Spinner Rahul Sharma’s participation in the ODI in the India Sri Lanka match at Hambantota has been thrown into jeopardy as he has been tested positive for the drug test after having been arrested at a rave party in Bombay last May.
On the eve of the Hambantota clash both Sharma and South African cricketer Wayne Parnell who also took part in the party together with many others have been found positive for having imbibed themselves with narcotics and alcohoL at a rave party in a posh hotel.
The Times of India report said Sharma is facing immediate arrest . Wayne Parnell is in South Africa now.
"We have not received any communication from BCCI, So, it would not be proper for me to comment anything on this at this stage,"said the team’s media manager Ravi Jain.
"The BCCI will first procure each and every bit of relevant information and then study them before deciding on the course of action,"Cricket Control official said.
Giving the break-up of those who tested positive, police said that of the 42, three tested positive for cocaine and cannabis, 35 tested positive for only cannabis and four tested positive for cannabis and MDMA. “Eighteen have tested positive for alcohol,” a police official said.
All of them will be booked under Section 27 of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act for consumption of drugs.
Under Section 64, those found to have consumed drugs for the first time could be sent for rehabilitation and de-addiction.
Urine and blood samples of all the detained persons were sent to the city’s Cooper Hospital, Bhabha Hospital and Sir J J Hospital on May 21 after the police raided Hotel Oakwood on May 20 and busted a sun-down party on the suspicion that it was a rave party.
- Walter Jayawardhana

Sri Lanka: Prescription For A Political Solution – Analysis


By:   By N Sathiya Moorthy
   July 20, 2012
Eurasia ReviewUnknown to the world and unacknowledged by the international community, Sri Lanka may be running to a point of no-return, all over again. ‘International intervention’ in the form of UNHRC resolutions has made the Government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa more vulnerable in electoral terms – or, that is the internal perception – and this has consequences for the course of the ‘ethnic discourse’ in the country. So has international invention given ideas to the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and more so the Tamil Diaspora, the latter having imbibed the duplicity of the LTTE with disastrous consequences as in the past.
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka
The Tamils cannot but share the blame. The Government had invited the Tamil moderates for talks when ‘Eelam War-IV’ was still on. The TNA said the Government’s idea might have been to isolate the LTTE in the midst of the Tamils. The Government’s possible aim was to commence a process that could lead to a political solution when the war. The TNA was obstinate and stayed away. So, post-war suspicions lingered in the Government’s mind – and that of the majority Sinhala polity. Those who wanted an honourable political package to be offered to the Tamils after the war were not sure on what would satisfy the TNA.
In the initial months after the war, the TNA too was not sure on what it wanted. When they finally spoke, and spoke to the Government, they gave enough indications about their mind-set. Their demands were near-similar to those of the Tamil moderates’ pre-war. Or, so felt the Government, and the Sinhala polity, particularly the ‘Sinhala Buddhist nationalist constituency’. Their numbers are not many, but their voices do not end up in wilderness. To them all, the Tamil moderates’ demands had led to the war in the first place, and they would not have any of it, any more. They are wary of the Government talking to exclusively to the TNA, the LTTE’s ‘sole representative’ status having poisoned their minds enough.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Ilankai Tamil Sangam

  http://sangam.org/taraki/taraki/header-tamil.gif 16th Year on the Web

Association of Tamils of Sri Lanka in the USA

Story of Waning Western Influence in Sri Lanka Should Not Be Over Blown

by Alan Keenan, Tamilweek.com, Toronto, July 19, 2012
As even former Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes admitted after the fact, the “international community”, including western governments, gave the green light to the Sri Lankan government’s brutal defeat-0f-the-LTTE at all costs, even if some among them weren’t very happy with just how bloody the process ended up being. Collectively they looked the other way and knew they were doing so at the time.
3. It is also simply not true that the Sri Lankan government, and in particular its ruling family, the Rajapaksas, doesn’t care what the West thinks now – or don’t desire that the west remains willing to prop up its flagging economy and fund its counter-productive and highly militarised “development” of the Tamil-majority northern province.
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa and Basil Rajapaksa
We need to be careful here. While there is some truth to some of the arguments in this piece and in the Washington Post article that inspired it, it misses some crucial points. To wit:
1. The trope of “Sri Lanka doesn’t need the West anymore, its support from China, Russia, Iran, Pakistan, etc is enough” is now an old and tired one – first trotted out by the Sri Lankan government officials in 2007 when the brutality of their counterinsurgency strategy (e.g., hundreds of forced disappearances and extrajudicial killings of Tamil suspected of involvement with the LTTE and murders of journalists and dissenters) was first being challenged internationally.
Unfortunately, too many western diplomats and lazy journalists believed it, thus making it to some extent a self-fulfilling prophecy. So, first, the Washington Post story is an old one, well-worn by now.
2. The story is also not entirely true: it’s not true that “As Colombo readied itself for the final military solution to its problem with LTTE, it did not seek Western approval or assistance” or that “the West was not needed nor was its approval sought”.
In fact, the Sri Lankan government’s military strategy, with its scorched-earth counter-insurgency policy and flagrant disregard for international humanitarian law, had significant support from those countries now supposedly worried by growing Chinese support to and involvement in Sri Lanka.
US intelligence and naval support was crucial to the destruction of LTTE ships bringing in arms supplies and ammunition; India’s effective naval blockade of the northern coasts was also crucial to trapping the LTTE; western military equipment was sold to Sri Lanka throughout the war; the global crackdown on LTTE fundraising and other activities, a crackdown led by the US and implemented by a host of other western governments, was also a necessary part of the equation that ultimately destroyed the Tigers.
And finally, the slowness of western governments, and of the UN Secretary-General and UN bodies, to react to the slaughter of thousands of civilians (ultimately likely to be on the order of 30-40,000 in a span of four months!) was in large part due to the desire they all shared to see the destruction of the LTTE and its leadership.
As even former Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes admitted after the fact, the “international community”, including western governments, gave the green light to the Sri Lankan government’s brutal defeat-0f-the-LTTE at all costs, even if some among them weren’t very happy with just how bloody the process ended up being. Collectively they looked the other way and knew they were doing so at the time.
3. It is also simply not true that the Sri Lankan government, and in particular its ruling family, the Rajapaksas, doesn’t care what the West thinks now – or don’t desire that the west remains willing to prop up its flagging economy and fund its counter-productive and highly militarised “development” of the Tamil-majority northern province. This is true in numerous respects:
a) The Sri Lankan has survived the past three years only because of $2.6 billion in IMF funding (much of it from western taxpayers) that has prevented it from running out of foreign currency needed to purchase the imported goods the country, and especially its elite, survives on (both imported oil, needed by all, and expensive consumer goods for the urban middles-classes and elite).
b) The World Bank and Asian Development Bank are loaning the Sri Lankan government on the order of half a billion dollars each year – and constitute, together with the Indian government – as big a donor/lender as the Chinese.
c) two of the President’s brothers are US citizens: Basil Rajapaksa, minister for economic development and defacto prime minister, and Gotabaya Rajapaksa, secretary to the ministry of defence and chief architect and implementer of the military defeat of the LTTE and the tens of thousands of civilian deaths believed by many, and with good reason, to have been part and parcel of the LTTE’s destruction.
Both Basil and Gotabaya are liable under US law for a range of possible violations of US and international law. Both continue to return regularly to the US and own properties in California.
Both has a vested and very personal interest in maintaining decent relations with the US government. So, too, there are other high-ranking Sri Lankan officials with deep ties to western governments – e..g., the Australian citizen and Sri Lanka’s permanent representative to the UN in New York, Palitha Kohona.
What does all this add up to? The story of Sri Lanka as an example of the waning influence of the west has some truth. And to the extent that it is true, western government’s flagrant violation of basic international law in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Guantanamo have contributed much to undermining its ability to restrain the Sri Lankan military in 2008-9 or to hold it account after the fact.
But the story mustn’t be overblown. Should the west, and important international organisations, like the IMF, World Bank and various UN bodies that depend to a great degree on western money, decide to use their influence in a thoughtful, tough, and coordinated way in Sri Lanka, they could have some impact. They just have to decide to try.
To be most effective, western governments and international bodies would have to work closely with the Indian government (and ideally also the Japanese, who are traditionally one of Sri Lanka’s biggest lenders). Tough, but not impossible.
Indeed, the March 2012 passage by the UN Human Rights Council of a resolution critical of the continuing post-war human rights problems and lack of investigation into alleged war crimes was possible only because of a united western front supported by a number of African and Latin countries, and crucially, by India.
The success of the resolution, signals that patience with the Sri Lankan government has begun to wear thin in Washington, Brussels, London and Delhi and that there are tools this set of governments can still use to pressure Colombo.
A small step – but a step nonetheless, and a step that the Washington Post article and your treatment of it should have recognised and tried to make sense of.
(Alan Keenan who is with the International Crisis Group has long experience in, with and about Sri Lanka. This piece is his response to recent articles about Sri Lanka in “The Washington Post” newspaper and “kings of war” weblog)
SL Military intelligence alleged of attacking house of prominent Judge in Jaffna
TamilNet[TamilNet, Thursday, 19 July 2012, 23:33 GMT]
Unknown attackers, believed to be Sri Lankan military intelligence operatives, on Wednesday night attacked the house of Point Pedro District Judge Ms Srinithy Nandasekaran with coconut fruit buds (kurumpaddi) that are hard as stones, causing damage to the roof of her residence. The attack comes a day after the protest in Nelliyadi against the slaying of Tamil prisoner Nimalarooban. The SL Police had sought legal ban from the District Judge to the protest in advance. But the District Court judge, after hearing the arguments of the SL police as well as that of the organisers, the Tamil National Peoples' Front (TNPF), had declined to ban the protest. Instead, she instructed the SL police to provide necessary security to the protest. 

In 2009, Ms. Srinithy Nandaseakaran was recognised as South Asia Regional Finalist for the US Secretary of State's ‘Women of Courage’ award. 

Her house is located 300 meters from Nelliyadi Junction near Murukamoorthy Temple. 

The attackers fled the site when the family of the Judge turned the lights one, she has told the SL Police in her complaint on Thursday.

A day before the protest, alleged SL military intelligence operated squads, attacked the houses of TNPF organisers in Vadamaraadchi.

On Wednesday, the SL military attempted to block the outside participants at the two entry points to Vadamaraadchi and warned them saying that ‘firing orders’ had been given to SL soldiers at Nelliyadi to quell the protest. 

However, the protest went ahead as scheduled and received participation of the Tamil National Alliance, Democratic Peoples Front, United Socialist Party and Nava Sama Samaja Party. 

While the protest was taking place, the SL military intelligence had dispatched four masked operatives in two motorbikes with Tamil Eelam Tiger flags in an attempt to incite trouble at the site of the protest. 

The intelligence operatives had to escape from being caught by the protesters.

Threats and intimidation have already started: Sumanthiran



Tamil National Alliance National list Member of Parliament M.A Sumanthiran spoke to the Daily Mirror on the TNA preparations for the Eastern Provincial Council Elections, the commitment of the party to the Parliamentary Select Committee and the Militarisation of the North. 

Eastern Provincial Council Elections
 If people vote we will win the election 

 Q. When it comes to the upcoming local government elections, what will be your campaign strategy? 

 
Basically door to door, through newspaper and we will also have public meetings. In the East, when we have it as a province, we will have public meetings as well. However already the indications are that there is a lot of violence that is being planned to be unleashed.
 
We feel there will be violence against our party, by other parties—particularly those aligned to the government. Our chief candidate found out earlier this morning (18) that his gate had been locked with many chains and padlocks, from the outside. His house is just a few yards from the Chief Minister’s house, so at least the Chief Minister's security would have known that this happened to his gate. Those who did this, thought that we were going to file nominations today (18) and so they locked him inside the house.
 
Therefore these types of threats and intimidation have already started. When we had our convention in Batticaloa this May, the Chief Minister himself went past many times, observing what was happening. Further there were others who were trying to disrupt the meeting; our buses from Jaffna were stoned    and the Battcaloa town was full of posters against our meeting. We are aware that there are only a very few people who can carryout these activities without the police apprehending them. Therefore it is those people who are involved in this. 
 
Q. Therefore you feel that the ground situation in the East is not conducive for campaigning by the TNA due to the forces in the area that are aligned to the government? 
 
Last time we did not contest. We went to the Supreme Court and filed a case and said that the Former Chief Minister belonged to a party that was still carrying arms and in such a situation we cannot contest.
 
This time round we are contesting, I would not say that the situation is conducive for a free and fair election, but it is better than the last time. Last time we would not have been able to even get candidates to contest because the level of intimidation and threat was that great.
 
However this time it is better, but it does not mean when I say better, that it is easy for the TNA to contest. Already a lot of violence is being prepared and threats and intimidation are being used. On Election day people will be prevented from voting, that is the general tactic.
 
Therefore we plan to call for foreign monitors. We have already asked the Elections Commissioner to look into this. We will ask the world to take a look at what is happening. 
 
Q. Taking into consideration all these matters, what is your level of confidence going into the Eastern Provincial Council elections?
 
We are fairly confident; we will do all that we can to ensure that despite the threats and intimidation our people will have the courage to come out and vote. If people do vote we will win the election.

Q. The TNA extended an invitation to the SLMC to contest jointly at the Eastern Provincial Council elections. The SLMC turned down this invitation and thereafter decided to side with the government and their ultimate decision was to contest alone. Do you feel that the TNA has a strong enough voter base to win the election without the support of the SLMC?
 
I am not sure that I can say that we can win without the support of the Muslim community but we can win without the support of the SLMC.

Militarisation of the North 

Q. You made an accusation recently that for people in the North to have funerals—they need to get military permission. However is this based entirely on your personal observations?
 
Not just funerals but even for public gatherings you need to get permission. There was one instance where some elderly gentlemen met as a reading club and the military personnel came and sat at the reading club and were listening to what was read. That is the situation in the North, you cannot have any gathering without the military personnel asking what it was for.
 
For funerals the military actually have a banner through which they express their sorrow and this is a signal that it is “military approved” funeral. It is not something that is written, but everyone knows it and they dare not violate it.
 
They involve themselves in civilian life, which they ought not to do—that is the very idea of militarisation. It is subtle that is the whole problem. If it was documented then we can challenge it or find fault with it.
 
When we went to have meetings with people in 2011, in certain areas of the Vanni for the local government elections, the people told us “don’t come and have meetings with us, because you will come and have meetings with us and go, but tomorrow, we will be called by the military intelligence and questioned by them. Therefore it is a hassle for us, don’t come—we know how to vote”.
 
Therefore in certain places like Manthai East we didn’t have a single meeting.  

Parliamentary Select Committee 

Q. What conditions do you feel are necessary for the resumption of talks between the TNA-Government? 
 
TNA talks began with the government in January 2011, consequent to the President appointing a committee. At the first meeting itself we told the government delegation  what our idea of devolution was. At the second meeting they wanted something in writing we gave it to them, and at the third meeting, in March 2011, we gave them a comprehensive set of proposals. Thereafter they said that they would respond to it, but they did not respond to it for five months and seven meetings. Each of these seven meetings started with an apology on their part, saying they were not ready to respond to our proposal. That is the reason why the talks broke in August.
 
They resumed once the President and Mr. Sampanthan met. Thereafter there were two conditions that were agreed upon firstly, that we bring in previous documents and governmental proposals for constitutional reform—into our discussion. The second agreement was that after the government and the TNA arrive at some level of consensus, with regards to a solution we will go in for talks with that consensus forming the basis for discussions.  However the government walked away from the talks—there were three days of talks, but the government delegation never turned up, we simply sat there.
 
Even after that we were ready to submit names to the PSC, provided that the clearly agreed positions of the previous documents were the basis of discussion. In May the leader of the opposition tried again and raised the Agenda of the PSC, which was agreed to by the TNA. The leader of the opposition merely asked if the government endorsed this agenda, so that the TNA and the UNP could enter the PSC. But the government never endorsed it. The leader of the house said many things, but he did not endorse the agenda, which has been previously agreed upon by both sides. Therefore the leader of the house got up and asked again “all I want to know is, do you endorse this agenda?” The government would only say “you come to the PSC we will talk about all this”. That is where the deadlock is, we are not opposed to the PSC. We will go to the PSC, we have never said that we will not go, but we are not going to the PSC to start from scratch, or to start on some aimless journey. We want it to be a precise exercise and the government has agreed with us on what that should be. All we want is a confirmation that this is what will be discussed in the PSC. 
 
Q. Do you think that so long as the present government is in place, there will be an acceptable political solution for the issues of the Tamil people and one that the TNA can agree upon?
 
So far the Mahinda Rajapaksa government has not delivered, but that is not to say that they cannot be convinced to deliver. We don’t give up hope nor should we judge now once and for all. We are committed to stay on this path, therefore whether it is this government or any other government our objective and commitment to finding a solution within a united country will remain. 

Lawyers Urges President To Remove Cabinet Minister Badurdeen


By Colombo Telegraph -July 20, 2012
Minister Rishad Badurdeen
Colombo Telegraph“Whist condemning the actions of the errant Minister and his goons, we are hopeful  that all political parties, the civil society, the media and the individuals will be united, leaving behind their differences,  in urging for stern action against the Minister and the group who attacked the court houses. We urge the people to take all possible steps within their powers to restore Rule of Law, democracy  and constitutional values in the country.” issuing a statement says, the Lawyers for Democracy.
Below we produce the statement in full;
LAWYWERS UEGE THE PRESIDENT TO REMOVE MINISTER BADUREEN & FACILITATE CRIMINAL PROSECUTION AGAINST HIM
Responding to the threats exerted by the Cabinet Minister Rishad Badurdeen on the Mannar Magistrate (Mr. A. Judeson), the Lawyers for Democracy (LFD) urges the President to remove the said Minister with immediate effect. Confirmed information discloses that the Minister has interfered with the course of justice and threatened the Magistrate and thereafter the  court houses came under attack.
The LFD is shocked to learn of the incident where the Minister had intimidated the Magistrate  and obstructed the administration of justice. In  case no. 396/12, the Magistrate has made judicial orders and the law requires the Authorities  to carry out the order of the court. A minister has no lawful authority whatsoever to interfere with course of justice.
While the courts were in session, the attack was carried out and  the courts were damaged,  by an organised group of people, instigated by the Minister.  This is the first time in the history of our judiciary that such direct threats and physical attacks has taken place. This is an indication of the level of deterioration of the Rule of Law in the Country.   LfD also reiterates the need to protect the institution of Judiciary and reminds the public of the constitutional duty on all organs of the state to respect and protect the judiciary.
Whist condemning the actions of the errant Minister and his goons, we are hopeful  that all political parties, the civil society, the media and the individuals will be united, leaving behind their differences,  in urging for stern action against the Minister and the group who attacked the court houses. We urge the people to take all possible steps within their powers to restore Rule of Law, democracy  and constitutional values in the country.
Lal Wijenayaka, KS Ratnavale, Lakshan Dias, Chandrapala Kumarage   and JC Weliamuna
(Conveners on behalf of the LfD)
Lawyers and lower courts judges to boycott courts tomorrow

| by A Special Correspondent from Colombo




July 19, 2012, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian)
 According to news reaching from Colombo, Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) has decided to boycott all courts tomorrow in support of the judges of lower courts who also will take similar action. This is to protest against the attack on two courts in Manner, the Magistrate’s Court and the High Court, allegedly on the instigation of a prominent minister in the government. 

This attack has been consequent to decision given by the Magistrate of Manner to evacuate number of persons who have taken the place of a group of other fishermen after chasing them from their movable fishing huts. The mobile fishing hut was attacked by a group of criminals. The Magistrate directed the police to apprehend the culprits. Soon after, a government minister contacted the Magistrate hoping to discourage him from placing legal sanctions on the perpetrators of the crime. Despite his attempts, the Magistrate insisted that the court order be carried out. It is believed that the attack occurred in response to this decision made by the Magistrate.

The Judicial Services Association has met in the afternoon today (19 July 2012) and discussed the issue and decided to boycott by the courts. The lawyers have also decided to supports the judges.

SRI LANKA: The boycott of the courts by judges and lawyers

AHRC LogoSriLanka_map.png
July 20, 2012


Statement :
 The attack on the Magistrate's Court and the High Court in Mannar, allegedly instigated by a powerful government minister, has led to a resolve by law court judges and lawyers to boycott all courts today. The Asian Human Rights Commission welcomes this decision as a very important step in the fight back against the serious undermining of the courts, the judicial independence, the role of lawyers and the very relevance of the law itself in Sri Lanka by the government for a considerable period of time. The only way forward is to fight back vigorously or otherwise legal institutions face the threat of extinction and the legal profession being into a position of irrelevance.

The Judicial Officers Association has resolved that:
(a) They will issue a press release on this
(b) Not to work on one day
(c) Move for contempt of court against the Minister

The Executive Committee of the Bar Association is meeting at 6.30pm today and is likely to adopt the same decisions as the Judicial Officers Association. The government is moving fast to prevent any actions by judges and lawyers on this and particularly to prevent any contempt of court case against the Minister.

The judges have also met the Chief Justice for her advice but information is not yet available.

The incident leading to this decision is as follows: a group of criminals allegedly sponsored by a government minister stoned the High Court and the Magistrate's Court of Mannar in a coordinated attack yesterday. A very tense situation is reported to be taking place.

According to the information we have received, a mobile fishing hut was attacked by a group of criminals and the Magistrate directed the police to apprehend the culprits. Soon after, a government minister contacted the Magistrate hoping to discourage him from placing legal sanctions on the perpetrators of the crime. Despite his attempts, the Magistrate insisted that the legally proscribed court order be carried out. It is believed that the attack occurred in response to this decision made by the Magistrate.

The crisis the judges, lawyers and the very legal system itself are facing now is the result of a prolonged crisis beginning, particularly with the 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka. The very purpose of this Constitution was to undermine the parliament and the judiciary and to place the executive president above the law. As a result of this Constitution all the public institutions such as the civil service, the police, the office of the Election Commissioner, the Attorney General's Department and other commissions such as the Human Rights Commission and the National Police Commission have all lost their independence.

Today the situation has come to a point where the functioning of the judiciary has become almost impossible. The judges complain of warrants not being executed by the police. The police in turn complain of being brought under the thumbs of politicians and therefore being unable to enforce the law. The people, in turn, complain that there is complicity between the police and the criminals and the criminals and the politicians.

As a consequence of the judiciary being undermined the legal profession has lost much of its fighting capacity and relevance. Many lawyers openly complain of how their role is being increasingly ignored in the legal process.

Under these circumstances a fight by the judges and lawyers is long overdue. In fact, there were instances when the lower court judges came close to striking and due to unfortunate miscalculations this decision was avoided. Once such occasion was when in the 80s stones were thrown at some of the houses of Supreme Court judges. On that occasion it was reported that the lower court judges met and came to a unanimous decision to strike in protest. Unfortunately one well meaning senior judge discouraged this action stating that it may not be appropriate for judges to go on strike and that the Supreme Court would look after its own problem. Though well meaning, this senior judge failed to understand the political importance of protest when faced with direct assaults on the judiciary by the executive. Has this strike taken place the history of Sri Lanka in general and particularly the situation of the independence of the judiciary and the legal profession would have been different to what it is now. The failure to act when the action was imperative has led to the present day crisis of the law in Sri Lanka.

The Asian Human Rights Commission has drawn attention to the crisis in the law in Sri Lanka for several years now. For further information please see: Gyges' Ring - The 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka and Sri Lanka-Impunity, Criminal Justice & Human Rights. We hope that even at this late stage the judges and lawyers will fight back with the view to save the legal system and that civil society and the media will support them.
  Read More...

Minister Bathiudeen managed the “Mannar Operation” from the Thalladi Camp

Friday, 20 July 2012 
Minister Rishard Bathiudeen has personally managed the operation to throw stones at the Mannar Magistrate’s Court and shout in filth at the Mannar Magistrate. He has worked from the Thalladi Army camp.
Bathiudeen’s supporters who were arrested on the 16th for allegedly throwing stones at the houses of Tamil fishermen in the Vedithalathivu fishing village in Mannar were presented before court on the 17th. The attack on the house was over a dispute on the ownership of part of the Vedithalathivu fishing village.
Sources said that Bathiudeen had arrived at the army camp on a helicopter received on the order of the Defence Secretary. The minister has sought permission to travel to Mannar by helicopter saying he would intervene in the matter. About 1,000 Muslim fishermen had been outside the Mannar Magistrate’s Court protesting. Attempts by the Mannar Police to set up a barricade to prevent the protestors from reaching the Magistrate’s Court had been thwarted by Bathiudeen. Sources from Mannar say that the protestors had received the opportunity to protest outside the courthouse afterwards.
The police had not attempted to stop the protestors from throwing stones at the Mannar Magistrate’s Court on a directive by HQI Thushara Daluwatte from the Mannar Police.
Sources said that the HQI was engaged in the business of selling fish to Kandy together with Bathiudeen’s supporters.
Bathiudeen’s supporters have started to pelt stones at the courthouse and some of the stones had hit police personnel as well. HQI Daluwatte had also been injured by a stone that had been thrown by the protestors. According to sources, the police had then fired tear gas to disperse the protestors.
The source who gave us the information said that both police and army personnel in the Mannar area were engaged in the fisheries business and even collected monies from lorries transporting fish at checkpoints.

Sri Lanka: Attacks on the Judiciary Intensify



Guest Column by Dr Kumar David    20-July-2012

Intimidation, physical attacks, and undermining of the judiciary and the judicial system in Sri Lanka, is nothing new – more on that later - but it has taken an intensity, under the Mahinda Rajapakse regime, never before seen. If the government loses the three provincial council elections slated for September, it is so brazen that it will make a grab for dictatorial power to prevent or rig the parliamentary and presidential elections due in the coming years. Here are a few horror stories to give a flavour of how the dispensation of justice is being subverted.
Nearly sixty-five years ago my father, then a young man, started his judicial career as the Magistrate of Mannar, a little peninsular tongue in the far north-west of this once fair island; the poor man must now be turning in his grave. Four days ago that very courthouse was surrounded by thugs and stoned, the current magistrate (Mr Judson) was threatened and intimidated, and the Rajapakse government moved heaven and earth to prevent the news going public and international. The evil genius behind the violence was a government Cabinet Minister. The Judicial Officers Association and the Bar Association have demanded that contempt of court proceedings be brought against the Minister and the Chief Justice has been asked to take a stand. Expecting the government or the CJ to do anything more than sweep the dirt under the carpet is, of course, just pie in the sky.
Here is an extract from a report of the incident that appeared in a website which in turn was quoting from a statement of the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC).
“(A) group of criminals, sponsored allegedly by a Minister, stoned and attacked the High Court and the Magistrate’s Court in Mannar yesterday, 18 July. According to reports received, a fishing Vadiya (landing area) was attacked by some people and on the basis of reports received the Magistrate directed the police to apprehend suspects. Thereafter the Minister is reported to have contacted the Magistrate with the view to influencing him to refrain from taking action. The Magistrate refused and insisted that the court order be executed. Thereafter a gang of thugs attacked the Magistrate’s Court and the High Court”.
Full Story>>>

Sri Lanka owes $15 bln on foreign borrowings since 1997


Thu Jul 19, 2012

Reuters* Needs to pay $4.9 bln to China for total loan of $2.96 bln
* China, ADB leading lenders, Western loans low
* Sri Lanka has borrowed $5 bln through five Eurobonds
By Shihar Aneez
COLOMBO, July 19 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka will have to repay more than $15 billion to foreign lenders such as China and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) from which it has borrowed over the past 15 years, a document submitted to parliament showed on Thursday.
The island nation owes China a total $4.9 billion including interest payments in respect of loans worth $2.96 billion obtained since 1997, while it must repay $4.64 billion to the ADB after borrowing $3.35 billion over the same period.
The Chinese loans have an average debt repayment period of 12.2 years, while the ADB loan average is for 21 years, data showed.
The document detailed Sri Lanka's borrowings and repayments to lenders including China, the United States, India, the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, ADB, the Japanese Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) and the European Union.
The document was presented by International Monetary Cooperation Minister Sarath Amunugama in response to a question from an opposition legislator.
It is not immediately clear if the government has already started to repay these loans.
Sri Lanka's economic output was $59 billion last year.
The country relies increasingly on China and Chinese companies for financing and expertise needed for more than $6 billion worth of infrastructure investments it has undertaken since the end of a three-decade civil war in May 2009.
Opposition parties and economists have raised concerns about the cost of loans from China, but the government has said cheaper funding has become difficult to secure as Sri Lanka is no longer ranked as "lower income" by the World Bank.
The government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is also finance minister, has borrowed to invest in the country's long-neglected infrastructure, selling five sovereign bonds since 2007 on international markets. The bond sales raised $4 billion to finance such projects and to retire costly short-term debt.
Most recently, it sold a $1 billion, 10-year Eurobond at a 5.875 percent yield on Tuesday.
Loans from Western countries including the United Stated have been low in the past 15 years, the data showed. Sri Lanka has rejected calls from them for an independent probe of human rights abuses during the final phase of its civil war. (Reporting by Shihar Aneez)

asian-american-300x200Asian Americans And Religion: Pew Study Highlights Hindu, Buddhist Diversity

By Khyati Y. Joshi -
Prof. Khyati Y. Joshi
Colombo TelegraphIn a report on Asian America and religion published today, the Pew Research Center offers new data that illuminate the complexity and richness of our pluralistic democracy. Pew’s national survey is providing one of the first detailed glimpses into how Hinduism is practiced in the United States.
While temples representing many strains of Hinduism have sprung up across the U.S. since 1965, the Pew report offers the first data on where American Hindus locate themselves on the broad and diverse field of Hindu belief. More than half (53 percent) identify as simply “Hindu,” but of the other half, about twice as many (19 percent) identify with the Vaishnava tradition of Hinduism as with Shaivite Hinduism (10 percent). Smaller percentages identify with the Hare Krishna tradition (3 percent) or with Vedanta philosophy (2 percent).
The Pew report also indicates how Hinduism is lived in the U.S. — how it plays out in the daily lives of individuals. This chance to go beyond encyclopedia definitions and scriptural analysis is priceless to a social scientist like me. The Pew report tells us that nearly half (48 percent) of Hindus engage in daily prayer, and another third (32 percent) pray weekly or monthly. More than three quarters (78 percent) keep a puja (altar or shrine) in their home. A similar number (73 percent) believe in yoga as a spiritual practice, and more than four in 10 meditate daily (44 percent) or fast during holy times (41 percent).
Read More
Khyati Y. Joshi was an external advisor to the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion and Public Life. She is a professor of education at Fairleigh Dickinson University and the author of the book ‘New Roots in America’s Sacred Ground: Religion, Race, and Ethnicity in Indian America.’ – Courtesy Huffington Post

Forced labour claims dent image of London 2012
EMILY DUGAN  
The IndependentThey were supposed to be the most ethical Games yet, but research in Asian factories supplying official clothing has led to allegations of sweatshop conditions



1 / 3


Official Olympic clothing sold by Next is claimed to have been produced in sweatshop conditions in Sri Lanka. The allegation comes days after the high street chain unveiled the formal outfits that Team GB will wear at the opening ceremony.

Workers at the company's factory in Sri Lanka allegedly receive poverty wages and are forced to work excessive overtime and to meet unrealistic, ever-increasing targets. Next denies the claims – which undermine pledges that the 2012 Games will be the most ethical yet – but has launched an investigation into conditions at the factory.
The claims emerged in a wider investigation into Olympic brands that found "widespread abuse of the human rights of workers" in eight factories around the world. Research by the Playfair 2012 campaign also cited allegations of mistreatment of staff working for the sportswear manufacturer Adidas in the Philippines and China.
Next's Sri Lanka factory employs 2,500 people making, among other items, London 2012-branded jackets, blazers, shorts and T-shirts. Employees claim they are routinely forced to work 60 hours of overtime a month.
Staff also claim they have no contracts and frequently face being laid off with no notice, with management threatening to sack them if they join a union. Workers who have protested were victimised, researchers found.
Full Story>>>

Sri Lanka Might Lose The Peace Dividend – Analysis

By:  - By Vikram Sood
    - July 20, 2012

Eurasia ReviewThree years ago when the war was over in Sri Lanka and the LTTE was defeated, this writer had observed in a discussion with a Sri Lankan diplomat that winning the war was the relatively easy part; the more difficult part – of reconciliation and winning the peace had now begun. If this was not done well and quickly enough, the situation could deteriorate just as easily and may be even worse with repercussions beyond Sri Lanka. Fears in New Delhi are precisely these.
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka
Today, the Tamil-populated Northern Province remains the most militarised and does not have an elected provincial council. The political process has not really begun. It is true that this is an internal political process, but as a neighbour, India would want to remain interested to ensure early reconciliation.
There are several opposing interests at work, Chennai against New Delhi, Colombo versus the Northern Province, Sinhala versus Tamils, Colombo versus the Tamil diaspora and Colombo suspicious of New Delhi. There are anxieties in New Delhi too that the pace that Colombo has adopted in reconciling is painfully slow and there is not enough desire to speed this or act in a manner that would bring satisfaction to the Tamils.
The recent shifting of the Sri Lanka Air Force technical personnel on training at Tambaram, Chennai to Bengaluru at the insistence of the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa was a result of her confrontation with her rival, M Karunanidhi the DMK leader. The AIADMK leader has also demanded that India should insist that Sri Lanka hold a referendum for the creation of Tamil Eelam. This is in direct conflict with the Indian stand for a united Sri Lanka. The demand that international action be taken against the Sri Lanka Army and politicians for alleged war crimes has also not gone down well in Sri Lanka. Colombo and the Sinhala population felt let down with India’s vote against Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Commission.
Colombo’s slow response has resulted in rumblings within the Tamil diaspora and there are indications that the LTTE is getting a fresh lease of life. The Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam formed just as the LTTE faced defeat, is now understood to be active in 12 countries. Another group, the Global Tamil Forum, is active in the UK and has been campaigning for an international investigation of war crimes. Possibly more such groups will begin to act together with Karunanidhi having revived Tamil Eelam Supporters Organisation working with the Tamil diaspora. There is great danger that both the Tamil Nadu parties would, in competition with each other, exacerbate the situation.
New Delhi must stop viewing its foreign relations with Colombo from the Chennai prism alone just as it was a mistake to view our relations with Bangladesh through Kolkata’s priorities. Tamil aspirations in Sri Lanka are important but there are other abiding interests too.
In fact it is precisely this kind of talk about Tamil Eelam emanating from Tamil Nadu that would worry a smaller country like Sri Lanka and affirm suspicions in the minds of the Sinhala majority about the intentions of Chennai and New Delhi. We need to be building bridges, literally, across the Palk Straits not creating bigger ditches. These bridges have to be not just between Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu but all the way up to Odisha inclusive of other southern states for the mutual economic and development benefit of the region.
Sri Lanka sits astride the Indian Ocean whose importance will grow in the decades ahead. So will Sri Lanka’s importance as China, the US and India become more active in the littoral and on the high seas, trying to protect their economic and security interests. While national reconciliation, rehabilitation and fulfilling political aspirations would be beneficial to Sri Lankans and Indians, the protection of India’s national interests are solely New Delhi’s concern.
These concerns will not be met through the dharma of coalition politics but through a stronger national concern that prioritises these interests over electoral compulsions. We cannot have a situation where our regional leaders want to run a foreign policy independent of the Centre.
The waters are choppy, there are obstacles and future turbulence is feared unless both New Delhi and Colombo act together with finesse and soon.
(The writer is a Vice President at Observer Research Foundation and a former chief of Research and Analysis Wing)