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, August 28, 2012

Two Tibetan teenagers die in self-immolations

Activists say the self-immolations are protests against Chinese rule and religious repression
Tibetans monks in Sichuan province (file image)
BBCTwo Tibetan teenagers have died after setting themselves on fire in Sichuan province, activists and US media said.
Lobsang Kalsang, an 18-year-old monk, and Damchoek, a 17-year-old former monk, set themselves on fire on Monday morning, London-based Free Tibet said.
It happened outside the Kirti Monastery in Aba county, where many of the self-immolations have taken place.
This brings the number of Tibetans who have set themselves on fire since 2009 to 51, the group added.
The BBC is unable to verify this figure. Foreign media are banned from the region, making reports hard to confirm. Chinese state media have confirmed some of the self-immolations but not all.
More than half of those who have set themselves on fire are believed to have died.
'No information'
The teenagers died on Monday evening after being taken to a hospital by Chinese authorities, Free Tibet said.
The young men were shouting slogans against Chinese rule and policies in Tibet as their bodies burned, Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported, citing witnesses.
"Witnesses saw them run about 20 steps with their bodies on fire, and then they fell to the ground," two monks based in India told RFA.
Former monk Damchoek has been identified as the brother of Tenzin Choedon, a teenage nun who died after setting herself on fire earlier this year, the reports said.
Lobsang Kalsang's roommate at the monastery was detained on Monday, both Free Tibet and RFA reported.
Aba county police said they had no information on the self-immolations, an Associated Press report said.
Kirti Monastery, which has been the focus of protests for more than a year, is surrounded by heavy security.
China's leaders blame the Dalai Lama, the Tibetans' exiled spiritual leader, for inciting the self-immolations and encouraging separatism.
He rejects this, and both activist groups and the Tibetan government-in-exile say the self-immolations are protests against tight Chinese control of the region and religious repression.

Monday, August 27, 2012

RISHAD BATHIUDEEN RELEASED ON BAIL

Blessings from a king-

Pictures: Kissing Buddha, Kissing Mary And Kissing Jesus



Buddha Weekly

Buddhism: The last honest religion? Entertaining Q&A with Dalai Lama

The Dalai Lama had a discussion in his home Dharamsala, India, on March 15th, 2011 with some Thai Buddhists. The first question asked of him is basically "Ho...


RISHAD BATHIUDEEN RELEASED ON BAIL


Rishad Bathiudeen released on bail  
Minister Rishard Bathiudeen was released on bail when he appeared before the Mannar Magistrate’s Court today, over the alleged threatening of a magistrate.

The Minister of Industry and Commerce, who is accused of threatening a magistrate in Mannar to change an arrest order, was ordered released on two personal bails of Rs. 500,000 each and cash bail of Rs. 10,000.

He was also ordered to reappear before the court on September 04 while the 22 persons arrested on charges of damaging the Mannar Court Complex were further remanded.

Judge R.A.S. Dissanayake on August 13 issued summons on Minister Bathiudeen to appear before court today (August 27), after considering a plea by the judge who was allegedly threatened.

The Court of Appeals had also ordered the Minister to personally appear in court on September 5 to answer the charges of intimidating the Mannar Magistrate.

Shining Light on Sri Lanka's Dirty Secret: the Disappearance of Prageeth Eknaligoda


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

Land of 'white van' disappearances and murder keeps its lips sealed over fate of missing journalist.
Disappearance of Journalist Prageeth
Courtesy: jdsrilanka.blogspot.com
(SALEM) - Exactly one year ago today, we brought our readers the story,Everyone's asking 'Where's Prageeth?' Sadly over this last year, nothing has been learned to bring this important Sri Lankan media figure, Prageeth Eknaligoda, back to his family.

His story has remarkable ties to many other similar occurrences that left behind widows, fatherless children and unanswered questions.
His wife, Sandya Eknaligoda, is featured in a new video which is included below. She offers her thoughts on the disappearance of her husband and how the voice of the international community could make a difference if it were to be projected. I also asked Sri Lanka Journalist Sonali Samarasinghe, the widow of Lasantha Wickrematunge, a journalist in Sri Lanka who 'predicted his own death' according to Jonathan Steele with The Guardian, to share her thoughts about Sandya, ongoing solidarity, comfort and encouragement for people in her position.

Background on State Sponsored Media Murders & Disappearances


Prageeth Eknaligoda
In the article from May 2011, Sri Lanka Tamil Genocide: Killing the Messenger, I detail many of these disappearances and killings of journalists and media employees while explaining how all of those who suffered this fate had one thing in common: they were willing to tell the truth about the Sri Lanka government's campaign to ethnically cleanse the Tamil minority from the North where they had a breakaway state called Tamil Eelam and a formidable resistance, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) or Tamil Tigers. With the Tamil Tigers in place, the ethnic extinction of Tamils was not possible. The LTTE scared the government troops, and in a fair fight the Tigers dominated.
So the government decided to exempt itself from the international laws that govern war and humanity and they waged a full-scale Genocide against all Tamils in the northern part of the country when a cease fire was in place It is Sri Lanka's president and military who broke that treaty.
In fact Sri Lanka committed 'Total War' against the Tamils and this is the very crime that the Geneva Accord was designed to protect human beings against in the first place; where there is no distinction between civilian non-combatants and and military personnel. Another practice that falls under 'Total War' involves murdering Prisoners of War (POW) and this is another subject I have indulged at length. The links to all of these stories are listed below.
While many media sources place the number of dead from this civil war conflict at 40,000, sources with solid information tell me the number of people who could not be accounted for when the smoke finally cleared in May 2009, was approximately 160,000.

Courtesy: yarl.com Image first published by nowpublic.com
Supporters of Sri Lanka and the government in particular, deny any and all involvement in this pogrom against Tamils yet it was all heavily documented with video, photos and first-hand accounts from the Tamils, who recorded their own demise; and then begins the video and photo evidence from the Sri Lankan soldiers who committed or were present for these heinous war crimes against the Tamil civilians and the Tamil Tigers. In particular, we have revealed how the Sri Lankan Army (SLA) staged a dead body to make it appear to be that of a combatant. The woman, a journalist with the LTTE, was photographed early on with her hands tied behind her back. It was clear that this young mother, whose name was Isaipriya, like so many other Tamil girls and women, was a victim of sexual violence before being murdered.
In the end, the government of Sri Lanka's (GoSL) decision to slaughter journalists did not work, and even here in the U.S. we are increasingly dialing into what happened. Every person who first discovers the bloody story from this island nation in a modern age seems horrified. Americans live with media that is ignorant as to what is taking place in the world and the small element that knows, fails to influence coverage. Even while 160k people are massacred. The saddest part is that we in the U.S. are isolated from this same threat of death journalists in Sri Lanka face.
The Channel 4 documentaries, Sri Lanka's Killing Fields by Jon Snow in London, put these images into perspective and shocked the western world with the harsh reality of what happened. As far as I know, neither edition of this two-part series have ever aired in the United States, however they are available on YouTube and anyone who needs a copy can write to me at the email below and I will see that you receive one. In Great Britain they were received with much acclaim.

The New Video



Sandya Eknaligoda conveys the painful suffering that she and her two sons have experienced with the sudden loss of their father. The truth of Sri Lanka is that many Tamils are kept in hidden camps in the jungle. There are as always, more questions than answers. It remains possible that Prageeth could be alive, it isn't likely but it is possible. This must only increase the agony for a family, yet it leaves a glimmer of hope that others, who know definitively that their loved ones were murdered, do not have. It certainly would be proper for this government to end these practices that create so much hardship and determination.
These are the translated words of the video in English. As she holds the picture up, Sandya Eknaligoda says:
    "This is.. this is the day we started to share our life together... our wedding...
    our ceremony.
    I am Sandya Eknaligoda. Prageeth Eknaligoda is my husband.
    In 2010 on January 24th he disappeared."
But what happened to Prageeth Eknaligoda?
    His wife explains, "Someone took him, made Prageeth disappear."
Who did it?
"My journey to find Prageeth is a big challenge! I have to face an irresponsible Government with no respect for the law. This is the kind of situation and the challenge I have to face in trying to find justice. No one takes it seriously!"
Yolanda Foster in the UK joins Sandya in the video, saying:
    "The Sri Lankan authorities have failed to punish perpetrators of serious human rights abuses. It's important that those responsible for Prageeth Eknaligoda's disappearance are held accountable."
Who is Prageeth?

    Sandya addresses this question: "Prageeth was a political analyst, cartoonist, human rights activist; a great friend for his friends. a good father, a good husband... and my closest friend. Prageeth worked mostly on issues related to finding justice... for rights, for equality. He struggled for a good society. I believe those activities were the reason behind his disappearance. Prageeth disappeared - that was the only way to silence Prageeth."
    Prageeth has been missing for more than two years, Sandya points out.
      "I wrote many letters asking for help to find Prageeth Police, human rights commission, media minister, first lady, president, No one responded. This is not my situation aline."
      "This society has disappeared thousands, Prageeth was one of them... especially in the North disappearances are happening here still. I have met families of people who have disappeared in the North. If we can raise our collective voice together - that's one way to find justice for disappeared people. The government turns blind eyes and deaf ears on issues of our right for justice. So that has allowed impunity to be established in Sri Lanka. That is why the families of disappeared people never get justice. If we need to get justice, we definitely need international involvement. There's no other way it can happen."
      "I think it's one of the worst crimes in the world, making people disappear. It is not just the one person who disappears... the whole family is psychologically killed. Now I have to look after my two kids, I have to play mother and father roles for them. Day to day life is full of challenges and security issues, my journey to find Prageeth is in the middle of it all. When Prageeth disappeared, our children were still in their childhood. Now they are teenagers. Prageeth hasn't seen them growing up last few years. Prageeth should feel and see these experiences. I'm never giving up my effort until the end. Prageeth and others who have disappeared should get justice!"
    Indeed, until the international community takes off its soft soul sneakers and straps on the combat boots of justice, political wankers in their jaded rationale will kill and deny; torture and abscond. I remind everyone of the saying, "First they came for the Jews..."
    When the government of Sri Lanka made the regrettable mistake of targeting, disappearing and murdering the reporters of this country who dared raise a voice of truth for the Tamil minority culture, it gained a whole new set of enemies; every other journalist alive on this planet. I have never met a single one who approved of government terrorism campaigns to silence political opposition.

    Lasantha Wickrematunge
    Sonali Samarasinghe has an incredible past; but her life was shattered when her husband Lasantha Wickrematunge who wrote:
    "When finally I am killed, it will be the government that kills me."
    Addressing Sri Lanka's president, Mahinda Rajapakse in a discussion with a close friend - he spoke of a cold government bent on eliminating those who call its illegal and immoral practices into question. As a political cartoonist, Lasantha knew he was on the radar and being targeted when he wrote:
    "In the wake of my death I know you will make all the usual sanctimonious noises and call upon the police to hold a swift and thorough inquiry. But like all the inquiries you have ordered in the past, nothing will come of this one, too. For truth be told, we both know who will be behind my death."
    Currently a Writer in Residence in Ithaca, NY, Sonali Samarasinghe continues to keep these stories and their impacts alive and pronounced. In the past Sonali has been a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, Editor-in-Chief of Lankastandard.com, an Attorney-at-Law, Commissioner for Oaths, Editor in Chief of The Morning Leader, Sri Lanka, and Consultant Editor for The Sunday Leader, Sri Lanka.
    With regard to Sandya Eknaligoda, Sonali Samarasinghe said today:
      "Women like Sandya inspire us all. What we need are more women and men of integrity and strength like her. She continues to fight for justice not only for her husband but for all of us, for the widows for journalists in exile and for the disenfranchised. I personally feel very much for her as a woman and a journalist because she and I have both felt the terrible loss of a husband in the most violent and brutal way by the hand of the authorities."
    Sonali Samarasinghe brings up another significant point; as war crimes and ethnic cleansing continues around the world in places like Burma, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Balochistan and Palestine, even the journalists who do follow Sri Lanka take their eye off the ball.
      "I'm distressed to see that Sri Lanka is a country that is quickly being forgotten as the world turns to the next crisis. But if the international community decides to put Sri Lanka's issues on the back burner and does not press for accountability and justice for war crimes, the pervasive culture of impunity will calcify.

    People in Sri Lanka live in fear every day. Not the Sinhalese Buddhist majority culture; they rule this place with a deadly fist. The threat remains only toward Tamils and their supporters. They are all the victims of a war against them that really began in 1948, when the British finally pulled their colonial claws out of this place. The northern Tamils have lived in this place for hundreds and hundreds of years. The earliest western explorers noted that Sri Lanka was comprised of two distinctly different cultures hundreds of years ago.
    But the government wants an exclusively Sinhala Buddhist nation and they have gone to great length to achieve this Nazi-like dream of exclusivity that does not belong to them. I have discussed the 'white vanning' issue with many people; from the strongest representatives for Tamils in this country, to a high-ranking GoSL official. Nobody denies that it takes place. Only the blame for the origin of these attacks is in question. Of course the GoSL maintains that these Tamil supporters are targeted by 'terrorist' elements, all government culpability is denied.
    Sonali Samarasinghe commented on this terrifying part of life facing Tamils at this very moment:
      "The white van has become a symbol of untold dread as the government continues to abduct political opponents and dissidents. Abductions are continuing with demonic repetition and according to Rights organisations there have been 58 abductions in the last nine months - a chilling reminder that thought the war ended three years ago the people continue to be terrorised by a despotic power hungry government that harbours criminal elements to further their own agenda."

    One of the actual 'white vans' used in Sri Lanka
    govt. terror campaign to abduct political opponents,
    from the article, European Tourists Waylaid in Sri
    Lanka, Resurgence of 'White Van' Crime
    Indeed, until the international community takes off its soft soul sneakers and straps on the combat boots of justice, political wankers in their jaded rationale will kill and deny; torture and abscond. I remind everyone of the saying, "First they came for the Jews..."
    You know the rest. There are no rewards in this life or the next for complacency. Help raise awareness, please repost this article on Facebook, Twitter, other social media and Websites and blogs. Make it happen, enough awareness will force Sri Lanka to the tables of justice and accountability.
    Please read the articles below, they represent thousands of hours of research. Learn what happened to the liberation movement of Tamils of Sri Lanka and how the govt. became determined to help end it.
    For God's sake, the world community should intervene to help families determine the fate of their loved ones. The 'secret' will die with increased media focus.
    Past reports about Prageeth Eknaligoda:
    World Report 2012: Sri Lanka Salem-News.com
    SRI LANKA: A Diplomatic Representative of the Nation or Just a Rascal? Salem-News.com
    Sri Lanka's Savage Smokescreen - Bob Dietz/CPJ Asia Program Coordinator

Another brutal attack sends Tamil political prisoner to coma

TamilNet[TamilNet, Monday, 27 August 2012, 06:51 GMT]
Following the attack on the Eezham Tamil prisoners in Vauniyaa resulting in the death of two and injury of many, details of the case of a new attack in the Galle prison last week, leaving a prisoner in coma status and others suspectedly injured, have started trickling out now. The Tamil prisoner in coma is identified as 34-year-old Sundaram Satheeskumar, father of a 10-year-old child. The victim was arrested at his residence in Kodikaamam in 2008 by the occupying SL military, handed over to the SL police and was kept in the New Magazine prison in Colombo without any charges filed against him. Last week, on 21 August, he was transferred to the Galle prison.

When his wife, Ms. Kavitha and his 10-year-old daughter Sahitya went to see him on Friday, they were told of the transfer, and when they went to Galle, the family found him in a state of coma admitted in the Karapitiya hospital in Galle.

SL prison authorities in Galle prion had also attempted to get signature from the wife of the victim in documents in Sinhala. Kavitha had refused to put her sign on papers, informed sources told media.

The prisoner had sustained serious injuries to his head in addition to other injuries elsewhere in his body that revealed brutal torture meted out to the victim, the sources further said.

In the meantime, unconfirmed reports said that the SL prison authorities have denied treatment to other prisoners who had sustained injuries.

Pictures: Kissing Buddha, Kissing Mary And Kissing Jesus



By Colombo Telegraph -August 27, 2012 
Colombo TelegraphA Sri Lankan court has given suspended jail terms to three French tourists for wounding the religious feelings of Buddhists by taking pictures deemed insulting. The pictures show the travellers posing with Buddha statues and pretending to kiss one of them. British Government has updated it travel advisory warning to say “You should avoid posing for photographs standing in front of a statue of Buddha. The mistreatment of Buddhist images and artefacts is a serious offence and tourists have been convicted for posing for such photos.”
Here are some pictures of  kissing religious statues in different parts of the world.

 




French Kissing The Buddha

By Sanjana Hattotuwa -August 27, 2012
Sanjana Hattotuwa
Colombo TelegraphRecently, when three French tourists were in the media and the dock for taking photos that had them kissing and posing with a statue of the Buddha at the Ambekke Temple in Kandy, Udaya Gammanpila, the spokesman of the blithely racist Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) noted, “Sri Lankans consider this statue to be sacred. They desecrated it. This is uncivilised behaviour” and went on to note that “We condemn this action of the three French tourists and urge Westerners to please respect our culture and act decently”.
The photos taken by the tourists are easily available online. The British FCOhas already revised its travel advisory to Sri Lanka, quite correctly noting that “The mistreatment of Buddhist images and artefacts is a serious offence and tourists have been convicted for posing for such photos”. Your columnist submits that no congregation, no place of worship, no religious deity or God is above ridicule and critique. Yet tourists who come from cultures that celebrate the freedom to write and rally against organised religion may naively devalue the power of religious symbols and places of worship in a country like ours. It is unlikely that Dawkins or even Hitchens when alive, who with every sinew and syllable stood against blind faith over reason, would have encouraged photo-ops with the Pope in a bikini, or going in the nude to Mecca. Kissing theBuddha in a country so strongly and globally associated with Buddhism is wrong – at best incredibly naïve, at worst insufferably dismissive of local sensibilities.
That said, Sri Lanka’s growing saffron mentality has also led to a sickening national hypocrisy. Around two years ago, a pop star’s visit and concert was cancelled because of a music video of his that featured, for all of two or three seconds, a bikini clad woman dancing in front of a barely distinguishable Buddha in the background. Some years before, the country banned the import of Buddha Bar CD’s. In the interim, there have been sporadic news stories, especially in Sinhala websites, with images of the Buddha on the t-shirts of foreigners, for example, as evidence of their depravity and degeneracy. That the government seeks to increase tourist inflows, since inconvenient to this argument, is never mentioned. Everything detrimental to Buddhism is portrayed to stem from a foreign influence. Never once does the critique extend to the behaviour of self-styled Buddhists themselves, and Sri Lanka’s own monks. The same people incensed by the behaviour French tourists are almost completely silent over the violence in Dambulla in late April, led not by tourists, but by Sri Lanka’s own Buddhist clergy and mobs organised in the name of Buddhism. The same JHU that rightfully calls the photos by the French uncivilised is revealingly silent over the reprehensible behaviour led and condoned by the Chief Prelate of Dambulla, his racist comments against residents of the area and the desecration of a place of worship by Muslims by monks who went on to publicly disrobe in front of it, all indelibly captured in the media. In fact, despite overwhelming video and photographic content, the same Police who swiftly prosecuted the French tourists are, to date, unable and unwilling to arrest or hold accountable a single person leading or in the mob in Dambulla. The same Buddhist monks and avowedly Buddhist politicians who express their condemnation of the recent photos by the French, went on to chant pirith and bless the Rajapaksa’s manic myrmidon Mervyn Silva, who on the grounds of a leading temple openly called for the killing and maiming of traitors earlier this year, and not for the first time.
The British FCO’s travel advisory got it wrong. If a tourist really wants to offend the Dhamma and the Buddha and get away with it with complete impunity, he or she should simply shave their heads and don a saffron cloth. Armed thus, any behaviour goes. And if that sounds offensive and absurd, it’s no more so than Sri Lanka’s mainstream psyche. All religions, in any country including ours, must remain personal, where it means and matters the most, whether genuflection, meditation or affection is anchored to a God, the Dhamma, Apple, Nicki Minaj or opium. Any institutionalised projection or openly preferred choice, especially when supported by the State, risks revisiting history replete with the most heinous of violence against non-believers by the faithful, and stoking religious intolerance.
We are fashionably aghast at the French. Given the events of 2012 alone, we really should be more ashamed at ourselves.
Sajanana’s blog ; http://sanjanah.wordpress.com/

Attempt to arrest Thevarapperuma for allegedly insulting the President

Monday, 27 August 2012
The media reports that President Mahinda Rajapaksa had asked the IGP not to take any legal action against criticism or false allegations leveled against is now being proven false.
The CD is working at instituting legal action against UNP Kalutara District parliamentarian Palitha Thevarapperuma and several local government politicians for allegedly criticizing the President.
The CID has summoned Thevarapperuma on August 21st to record a statement over a speech made by him referring to the President at a rally attended by former Army Commander Sarath Fonseka.
Statements have also been recorded from councilor of the Mathugama Pradeshiya Sabha Shantha Priyankara and another person who is a teacher by profession over Thevarapperuma’s speech.
Meanwhile, former member of the Bandaragama Pradeshiya Sabha, Attorney Anura Priyalal has also been asked to make a statement to the CID. He is being accused of making critical comments against the President at a meeting in Galewela that was attended by Fonseka.
Police Spokesperson SSP Ajith Rohana when inquired about Thevarapperuma’s questioning by the CID said there were comments made with hatred in the MP’s speech and that the CID had questioned him about it. The spokesperson added that more information about the statement recorded by the CID could not be revealed since the MP was to be further questioned.
However, the CID investigation into Thevarapperuma’s speech has proven the fallacy behind the news item released by the Presidential Media Unit about the President claiming he was a mature politician and that he would not take legal action for criticizing him.
A human rights activist said the statement was a publicity stunt aimed at the next UNHRC sessions in a few months.
Also, employees including the maid at the Srilankamirror website office were arrested a few months back for allegedly bringing disrepute to the President’s Royal name. The case on the matter is still being heard before the Colombo Magistrate’s Court.
The human rights activist who spoke to us said that if there was any truth in the so-called statement made by the President, the CID investigations into Thevarapperuma and the case filed against the Srilankamirror employees have to be stopped.

Thilak says it was "day light robbery"


MONDAY, 27 AUGUST 2012
The Daily Mirror in an explosive interview with former SEC Chairman Thilak Karunarathne. Spoke to him in detail about what transpired in the run up to his resignation. In his most detailed and explosive interview up to date since his resignation Karunarathne said that what happened in the bourse was “day light robbery” and it was clear that “Powerful people” wanted him out.


The FUTA Option And Its Replicability


By Jehan Perera -August 27, 2012 
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThe public meeting last week by university academic staff led by the Federation of University Teachers Associations was a success both in terms of numbers who participated and the government’s response to it.  The outcome of the event also points to the possibility of domestic pressure as against reliance on international pressure to make the government move.  The modestly sized Hyde Park where the event took place has been a favourite site for public rallies and demonstrations organized by left and socialist parties in the past.  This time it was members of universities, both staff and students, who filled most of the park.  One of the achievements of the organizers was to get some 40 other groups to join the meeting.  Those who were on the platform included the icon of the trade union movement Bala Tampoe of the Ceylon Mercantile Union, and the Ven. Maduluwave Sobitha, the convenor of a peoples movement towards a just and righteous society to bring democracy back to Sri Lanka.
Unlike in the case of other protest meetings, most notably in the north of the country, the government made no visible attempt to obstruct the meeting at Hyde Park.  There was no police submission to the courts to ban the meeting on the grounds of disturbance of the public peace nor an intimidating presence of security forces at the venue.  The police however did close roads in the immediate vicinity of Hyde Park.  This could have been to give greater freedom to those who attended the meeting to move to and fro without any possibility of clashes with those who may  have been sent to disrupt the meeting or it could have been to prevent passing traffic from witnessing the meeting and joining it spontaneously.
For many who participated in the meeting, which was in effect a public rally, this would have been the first time in many years that they had engaged in a public protest-oriented activity.  After the war entered its final phase in about 2007 there were real concerns about large public events, as they could be easily targeted for high cost terrorist activities.  After the war’s end, the memory of its harsh end and the ruthlessness of the anti-terrorist campaign, which on occasion spilled over into acts of terror against even non-militant government opponents, chilled the enthusiasm for mass mobilization by civil society.    For the past several years the public mobilization that has taken place has been by political parties.
NEW CONFIDENCE            Read More

India will continue to train Sri Lankan defence personnel


Press Trust of India | Updated: August 27, 2012
Latest NewsNew Delhi: India will continue to train Sri Lankan defence personnel at its establishments, Minister of State for Defence M M Pallam Raju said today, notwithstanding opposition by parties from Tamil Nadu.

The minister's statement came against the backdrop of the demand by the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalitha to expel two such Lankan officers from Defence Staff Services College in Wellington.

"Sri Lanka is a friendly foreign country and the training will go on. Sometimes there are objections raised by local governments which we have to take into consideration," Raju told reporters in the capital.

In July, nine Sri Lankan defence personnel were removed from a training institution in Tambaram to Bangalore after opposition from political parties in the state. 

In her letter, Jayalalithaa said such "reprehensible attitude" on part of the Centre was reflected in permitting two Sri Lankan defence personnel Major Dissanayaka Mohottalalage Vengra and Captain Hewawasam Kadaudage to undergo 11 months training at Defence Services Staff College at Wellington from May 19.

Ms Jayalalithaa has requested the Prime Minister to instruct the Defence Ministry to immediately halt the training being given to the two Sri Lankan defence personnel and send them back to their country immediately. 

Meanwhile, Raju said the Defence Ministry has given its nod for operation of international flights from the Vishakhapatanam airport which is under the control of the Navy.

He said the timing of flight operations has been extended by three hours and international flights will start operating from October 1.