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, September 20, 2012


The Guardian homeBurma announces amnesty for political prisoners


 and agencies-Monday 17 September 2012
Family members wait outside Insein jail, Rangoon, during Burma's last prisoner amnesty in January. Photograph: Khin Maung Win/AP
Insein jail, RangoonOpposition party optimistic that 424 detainees will be released in latest amnesty as president prepares for trip to US

Relatives, friends and associates of hundreds of political activists and human rights campaigners held in Burmese prisons are waiting for details of a new official amnesty which, according to state television, could see more than 500 detainees set free.
Though Monday's announcement by the information ministry did not identify the prisoners, officials from Burma's main opposition party said the move could mean all remaining political prisoners would be freed.
The release is the latest in a series of measures by the government of President Thein Sein, who has pledged to open up the once-isolated south-east Asian state.
It comes a day after Aung San Suu Kyi, Nobel laureate and leader of the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD), arrived in the US for a major tour, during which she is expected to meet President Obama.
'India will only alienate Lanka if it tries to coerce it'

Posted by: - Thursday, September 20, 2012
'Coercion will only alienate Lanka'Oneindia NewsThe Tamil issue has resurfaced recently affecting both India's domestic politics and foreign policy priorities. While there are calls to boycott Sri Lanka for overlooking Tamil sentiments, other quarters believe such measures would only affect India's foreign relations with the island state ruled by a powerful President. OneIndia News speaks to retired Military Intelligence officer of the Indian Army, Col R Hariharan on the issue.

'Nobody can force Lanka on Tamil issue'Col R Hariharan served as a MI specialist on Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka as well as terrorism and counter-insurgency for nearly three decades. His operational experience includes India-Pakistan wars in Kutch (1965) and East Pakistan in 1971 (now Bangladesh) and counter insurgency operations in North Eastern States, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. He was awarded the Visisht Sewa Medal (VSM) for his service as the Head of Intelligence of the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka (1987-90).
Col Hariharan writes and gives commentary on national security issues in national and international print and electronic media. He is currently associated with the Chennai Centre for China Studies and the Delhi-based intelligence think tank South Asia Analysis Group.
Here is the full interview:
OneIndia: We are seeing protest in the Indian media about the Sri Lankan government's atrocities against the Tamils there. Tamil Nadu CM Jayalalithaa took a retaliatory stance against the island nation by driving out football teams and pilgrims.
There is a call for boycotting Sri Lanka from certain sections. India-Sri Lanka relations are not simplistic for besides the ethnic sentiments, a crucial strategic significance is also attached to them. Leaders like Jayalalithaa are actually endangering India's bilateral engagements with Sri Lanka in the name of 'shielding' ethnic nationalism.
If we turn belligerent towards them and do not show interest in a peace process, the Lankans can retaliate in their country against Indian sentiments as well. Do you think such coercive diplomacy will do India any favour? What is your take on this?
Col Hariharan: Your have raised four separate but inter-related issues in your question. My views on these issues including 'coercive diplomacy' (an oxymoron as diplomacy means skill and tact in dealing with people) are:
First, regarding Ms Jayalalithaa's recent action in sending back Sri Lankan football teams and pilgrims, she has now clarified that it was a symbolic act to register her protest against the continued aberrations in Sri Lanka's handling of Tamils. Sri Lankan pilgrims and others are welcome to visit Tamil Nadu, she has added wisely as a lakh of people come to Chennai from Sri Lanka.
                                                            Full Story>>>

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

A grave site emerges from the Anandapuram school premises
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
Human skeletons and remains of half burnt bodies have started to emerge from villages in the Pudukuduirippu area where the final stages of the war took place. Villagers who had gone to the Anandapuram village in the Pudukuduirippu area under the resettlement programme have had to face this situation.
Piles of human skeletons have been found amidst the buildings and debris of the Anandapuram Tamil School. The Pudukuduirippu area was used by civilians to enter into the military controlled areas and to draw back to the Mullavaikkal area.
Although the Tamil political parties claimed that around 40,000 Tamil civilians were killed during the period, the government has claimed that only 8,000 were killed. A proper investigation has not been carried out to determine if the skeletons found in Anandapuram belongs to civilians. Tamil political parties and human rights organizations claim that the bodies of civilians have been buried in the areas under the military in Vellamullavaikkal.
United States make various pressures against the Lankan government on solving national issue: New US ambassador
[ Wednesday, 19 September 2012, 04:28.02 PM GMT +05:30 ]
New US ambassador to SriLanka Michele.J.Sison met Jaffna district bishop Rev.Fr.Thomas Saundranayakam at bishop house today.
During the discussion with the Bishop ambassador went on to say United States make various pressures against the Lankan government on solving national issue of this country.
Bishop urge the ambassador make pressures towards government on implementing LLRC recommendations in the country.
Replying to the request US ambassador went on to say in various occasion we have stress and make pressures towards Lankan government to solve ethnic issue of this country, however they fail to solve these problems.


TNA’s PSC participation will be pursued when Rajapaksa returns from India

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 18 September 2012, 13:12 GMT]
TNA leader Sampanthan was invited at a short notice on Monday night to meet
 Mahinda Rajapaksa at his house on Tuesday morning. According to a press release by Mr. R. Sampanthan on Tuesday, at the end of many topics that were discussed, Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa “responded by inviting Mr.Sampanthan to the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) and stated these matters could be addressed when the process commenced. Mr.Sampanthan responded by stating that the TNA has never taken up the position that it will not attend the PSC, but has only insisted that commitments made must be implemented before attending the PSC sessions. It was agreed that this matter would be further pursued on the return of the President from his visit to India.”

Mr. Sampanthan has raised matters related to election malpractices in the Eastern Province; intimidation to elected TNA members, possibilities of forming government along with SLMC, resettlement in Champoor and Valikaamam and appointment of Tamil-speaking governors and Government Agents in the North and East.

Mahinda Rajapaksa congratulated Sampanthan “on coming a good second at the Eastern Provincial Elections.”

Had the elections been free and fair, the TNA would have come first, Sampanthan replied.

According to the TNA press release, Mahinda Rajapaksa told Sampanthan that he was prepared to sit in the opposition and he had indicated that to the SLMC too.

When Sampanthan brought out the matter of harassment to five elected councillors of the TNA by SL military intelligence personnel, pressurising the councillors to cross over to Colombo government’s side, Mahinda Rajapaksa initially denied that, but later agreed to look into the matter, the TNA press statement said.

The agreement citing further discussions after Rajapaksa’s return from India aims at diffusing the mounting opposition in India to Rajapaksa’s visit, political observers in Colombo said.

Full text of the statement by Mr Sampanthan follows:

Statement

Following on an invitation from Mr.Lalith Weeratunge, Secretary to the President to the TNA leader Mr.R.Sampanthan on the night of 17th September 2012, for a meeting at the President House on18th morning, a meeting took place between the President and Mr.Sampanthan as arranged. Ministers Maithripala Sirisena and Professor G.L.Peiris were also present at the meeting.

The President congratulated Mr.Sampanthan on coming a good second at the Eastern Provincial Elections and Mr.Sampanthan stated that if the elections had been free and fair the TNA would have come first. Mr.Sampanthan further stated that as per the mandate received by the TNA and Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (S.L.M.C.), the TNA invited the SLMC to form a government and offered the SLMC the Chief Ministership. The United National Party (UNP) would have backed such an arrangement The President responded by stating theta he was quite prepared to sit in the opposition and indicated to this to the SLMC and also referred to the offer made by the TNA to the SLMC. He however stated the now things were finalized.

Mr.Sampanthan stated that eleven members elected to the Eastern Provincial Council from the TNA should be able to function freely and independently and without any deterrence or discrimination. If this did not happen it ould mean that the Tamil people were being punished and this should not be allowed. Mr.Sampanthan also stated that five of the elected Provincial Council members from eh TNA were approached and harassed with offers of vehicles, houses, money and contracts to cross over to the government and the telephone numbers and vehicle numbers of these persons, believed to be military intelligencer personnel, were available. The President initially denied this but later agreed to look into the matter.

Mr.Sampanthan also raised the question of resettlement in Sampoor and Valikaamam and the appointment of civilians as Governors of the Northern and Eastern provinces and the appointment of Tamil speaking civilians as Government Agents of Trincomalee and Ampaarai.

The President responded by inviting Mr.Sampanthan to the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) and stated these matters could be addressed when the process commenced. Mr.Sampanthan responded by stating that the TNA has never taken up the position that it will not attend the PSC, but has only insisted that commitments made must be implemented before attending the PSC sessions. It was agreed that this matter would be further pursued on the return of the President from his visit to India.

Singed: 
R.Sampanthan, 
Leader T.N.A. 
18.09.2012.

Editorial - Whither governance and rule of law?


The ‘Malaka Silva’ affair has been ‘the’ incident during the last few days with media taking great pains not to miss a wee bit of the drama unfolded—which even Malaka’s father, Minister Mervyn Silva said that led to the sale of unsalable newspapers in the country.

But did anybody express his or her surprise at how the events unfolded? How the police had to good-naturedly wait for the surrender of Malaka instead of going after the suspect as in the case of the village rowdy, Kalu Malli?

If anybody dares think that this kind of gross violation of rule of law in the country will  have nothing or little to do with the image of the country, they are clearly mistaken. The rule of law and the governance are the most important features of a vibrant democracy.



But in Sri Lanka’s case there have been too many Malaka Silvas who have challenged the rule of law in the country and too many transgressors who have mocked good governance. It was reported that as soon as Malaka was taken to remand prison, he had been admitted to the prison hospital!

And also it seems that things will be diverted  elsewhere as it was reported that the Army is conducting an investigation against the Army Major who had been allegedly assaulted by Malaka to find out whether he had put a log entry before going to the Hilton hotel where he was attacked!

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka has a higher education minister who is entrusted with the mission of dismantling the country’s education system. When the university dons come up with their demands, what he does is gather a set of scavengers in the university system itself who are not mentally and physically healthy to be in it and launch a mudslinging campaign against those lecturers. Not stopping there, the goons of this minister had allegedly damaged the vehicles of the lecturers who came for discussion with the authorities by placing nails under the tyres of their motor vehicles!

At the same time we have a stock market which reminds us of the old adage ‘putting a fox in charge of the hencoop’. As media reported, the new Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman has a number of ‘conflict of interest’ cases against him, being the Chairman of a listed firm and closely associated with those who had been under the radar of SEC under the previous Chairman, Tilak Karunaratne.

All in all, every passing minute you inhabit this beautiful island you can’t help thinking of the former tag line of Sri Lanka Tourism ‘The land like no other’.

http://www.colombotelegraph.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/mervyn-1.jpgMajor ready to swallow the 
indignity and ignominy after 
getting his head broken
Wednesday 19 of September 2012
(Lanka-e-News-19.Sep.2012, 1.30PM) Major Chandana Pradeep who got his head seriously injured owing to an attack launched by Malaka Silva and Rehan Weeraratne , filed a motion in the Fort Magistrate court on the 18th consenting to come to an amicable settlement with the assailants .

It is not the usual practice of the court to hear a petitioner’s motion without the accused being in court. The court accepting the motion however stated that if this is to be heard before the next court date , that is Monday next, the case can be called again earlier , but that should be without inconveniencing the CID . Hence the lawyers for Chandana Pradeep were instructed to inform the CID on this , and get their consent for an earlier date to hear the motion. The court also stated that there are no objections now to granting bail to the two accused , and the Major shall be present in court at the next date .

It is to be noted that the Major of the Army intelligence unit who is ready to come to an amicable settlement is nevertheless still taking treatment at the Army Hospital . On the 9th , he was mauled by Malaka and Rehan the sons of two Ministers and a group at the JAIC Hilton vehicle park ,and his head was broken at several places. Moreover , the criminal offenders had committed the most serious offences of robbing the official pistol , gold chain and mobile phone of his .
The Major lodged a complaint with the Slave Island police against these criminals . But the police took no action against the sons of the Ministers even after the lapse of ten days. After media exposures and a public outcry , the accused surrendered on the 17th ,and they were remanded for a week by the courts. The two accused had been on remand just for a day , and have meanwhile induced the Major to give in. 

A great statesman once said , a slave is a slave because he consents to slavery.

Rajapaksa Intimidates Chief Justice


By Colombo Telegraph -September 19, 2012
Colombo TelegraphPresident Rajapaksa wanted the Judicial Services Commission (JSC) to meet him regarding the functions of the JSC, but the JSC, in an official meeting, has decided not to meet anyone regarding its official functions as such discussion would be unconstitutional. It is after this meeting that the JSC has issued a statementcondemning the interference it faces, the Colombo Telegraph has learnt.
Chief Justice
The case against the Chief Justice‘s husband is being used to twist her arm, informed sources told Colombo Telegraph. “During the hearing of the Divineguma Bill, the Bribery Commission summoned him obviously to intimidate her. Yesterday he had been again summoned by Bribery Commission. It is obvious that the NSB deal is not being investigated fully, but the Bribery Commission and CID are being used to intimidate the CJ. If the government wants to investigate into that deal, they must also investigate into the conduct of Nivard Cabraal and Ajith Devasurendra, etc. This is a selective exercise”, said a senior lawyer who wished to remain anonymous.
The clash between the judiciary and the executive started with Minister Rishard Bathurdeen‘s attack on the Mannar Magistrate Courts. The President openly supported the Minister and got his close lawyers to defend Rishard. All judges struck work and lawyers demonstrated. A contempt of court against Rishard case is now pending in the Court of Appeal.
The Supreme Court’s determination on the Divineguma Bill was tabled in Parliament yesterday (18 September). A government-sponsored crowd – about 3000 were assembled in the Kalapola near Parliament – transported from various locations in about 40 buses, had been orchestrated, armed with anti Supreme Court slogans. Ministers Basil Rajapaksa, Lakshman Yapa Abeywardene and Bandula Gunawardene were seen among the “protestors.” The Supreme Court decided that the Bill was unconstitutional and cannot be passed by Parliament without first being submitted to the Provincial councils for the ascertainment of their views.
There are disciplinary actions against certain magistrates including Aravinda Perera, a debtor whose name is in the CRIB more than 15 times. He was interdicted. He is known to be a close friend of Namal Rajapaksa. There were attempts to reinstate him but the JSC declined. Previously Rajapaksa, High Court of Tangalle (before whom Julampitiya Amare’s cases were taken) wanted to be appointed as a High Court Commissioner after his retirement. The JSC refused and sent him on retirement at 61 years. All attempts by the highest to keep him failed.
Judges Association is expected to meet today to discuss these issues.
To read the SC determination on the Divineguma Bill click here
http://www.colombotelegraph.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/mervyn-1.jpg
http://www.colombotelegraph.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/mervin_silva1.jpgMalaka –Rehan cannot privately settle a criminal case – legal luminaries
(Lanka-e-News-19.Sep.2012, 1.30PM) Legal luminaries of the country protest that an amicable settlement cannot be arrived at by Major Chandana Pradeep filing a motion in court that he is personally prepared to consent to this in the case where he was assaulted ruthlessly and his head was broken at several places by the sons of two Ministers and a group of thugs recently. The Lawyers assert that this is not a civil case , and therefore such arrangements cannot be made to dismiss this criminal attack.

It has been pointed out that this case has been filed by the CID against Malaka and Rehan . Besides the indictments are most heinous and criminal: robbery , obstruction of performance of official duties, assaulting a Major of the Army and forcibly taking away his official pistol. Consequently , this is not a case where a private settlement can be arranged going by the charges. The two accused stand indicted on serious offences which are un-bailable, the legal circles emphasize irrespective of what illicit understandings are reached outside the legal realm. 
They are most concerned because , if this kind of illegal political pressures are to hold sway , and Majors are treated this disdainfully because the country’s laws have gone to the dogs , pernicious legal precedents can be created . 

It is most likely therefore that in the future the Majors too will be beaten and tethered like the dogs of the politicians , not to mention the country going to the dogs due to the ‘political dogs’ who are behaving worse than the stray dogs on the streets. 

Self-immolation protestor dies, anti-Rajapaksa agitations intensify in Tamil Nadu


TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 19 September 2012, 01:38 GMT]
26-year old auto driver Vijayaraj from Salem in Tamil Nadu, who immolated himself on Monday early morning protesting Mahinda Rajapaksa’s visit to India, succumbed to his injuries on Tuesday noon. A follower of Periyaar, member of CITU, and a supporter of the Tamil Eelam cause, Vijayaraj, despite being in his death bed, insisted on talking to media at the hospital that Rajapaksa should not be allowed into India. I did it, because Tamils in unison should rise up against the Indian government that welcomes Rajapaksa even after seeing the heroic sacrifices, he was cited by Tamil media Nakkeeran. Agitations intensify in Tamil Nadu, while the BJP Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh, Shivaraj Singh Chauhan, claims that Rajapaksa’s visit to Sanchi to inaugurate a Buddhist University is ‘apolitical’. 



Tamil Nadu political parties have intensified their protests against the entry of the genocide-accused SL President to India. 

Leaders and supporters of the MDMK are on a journey to the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh to oppose the presence of Rajapaksa at the function on 21 September with black flags. 

Meanwhile, activists belonging to Naam Tamizhar Katchi have observed a daylong bandh in Puduchery on Tuesday. 

About 1050 MDMK activists will be travelling on 21 buses to Madhya Pradesh. These include 50 women working under MDMK women’s wing state secretary Kumari Vijayakumar. 

Other MDMK stalwarts Ganeshamurthi, Mallai Sathya, Velacheri Manimaran will be travelling along with party leader Vaiko. 

DMK leader Karunanidhi has also urged the centre to stop Rajapaksa’s visit to India.

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Ms. Jayalalithaa’s stand on declaring Rajapaksa a war criminal is well known.

Mr Vijayaraj is a member of the CITU, which is a trade union of the Marxist Communist Party of India (CPI-M). His party follows an anti-Eezham stand, and in recent times it was seen in alliance with the Congress and BJP on the Eezham issue.

While the grassroot of Tamil Nadu and almost all the powerful political parties of the state, impelled by the realities, have taken up the Rajapaksa-visit issue as their own struggle for justice and self-respect, the detractors in New Delhi and Washington are busy in luring the TNA and some articulating sections in the diaspora to engage in submissive talks with Rajapaksa, compromising with the fundamentals of the struggle, informed circles commented.

The Eezham Tamil grassroot in the island and in the diaspora is simmering with anger over the deceptions of a polity that takes place behind their back. Their anger at seeing the least respect they receive from New Delhi and Washington even for their democratic struggle and righteous demands has now come to a silent but boiling point, the informed circles further commented.
Next stop, Jaffna
Rajapaksa: Elections Lover
article_image

By Kath Noble

Mahinda Rajapaksa must really love elections. Since he came to power, at least some part of the country has gone to the polls almost every year, sometimes more than once. We had local and provincial council elections in both 2008 and 2009, parliamentary and presidential elections in 2010, more local elections in 2011 and now more provincial council elections in 2012. No prizes for guessing that in 2013 somebody somewhere in Sri Lanka will be voting.

I hope that it will be the turn of the Northern Province.

Concerns have been raised about the prospect of a TNA-led administration in the North, on the basis that the party may use the platform to push for more devolution or even a separate state, by itself or with the support of the West.

Indeed it might. The TNA hasn’t done enough to distance itself from the use of violence to achieve political ends, or to distance itself from the goal of Eelam. Both would have been helpful for its constituency and for the country, since distrust of the TNA’s intentions encourages or is used as an excuse by the Government to delay the much-discussed ‘political solution’, or to avoid it altogether. Perhaps the TNA is under pressure from the diaspora, or maybe it is yet to be convinced that the war is over.

Whatever, keeping it out of power by undemocratic means isn’t going to convince either the party or its supporters to change their ways. The voters of the Eastern Province demonstrated as much on September 8th.

There have been many fascinating attempts in the media to present the results of the provincial council elections in the East as a resounding endorsement of the Government and its policies. However, this is no more than wishful thinking.

For a start, the UPFA won by a margin of less than 1%, receiving 31.58% of the popular vote compared to 30.59% for the TNA. Given the usual massive abuse of state resources by the incumbent administration, it is ridiculous to suggest that people are anything like enthusiastic about Pillayan et al staying on at Trincomalee.

Also and most importantly, while the UPFA’s vote share fell by well over 10% of the total, the TNA’s went up by nearly 10% – it secured only 21.89% of the popular vote in the 2010 parliamentary elections. The TNA now enjoys the support of the vast majority of Tamils in the East. And it got eleven Tamils elected to the provincial council, compared to only one from the UPFA (the former chief minister, whose achievement has been questioned).

Being out of office clearly isn’t a problem for the TNA in terms of popularity.

Of course it isn’t. While the Government insists that life is now very good in the former conflict areas, a lot of people living there don’t agree. They aren’t so hopeful about Mahinda Rajapaksa’s development agenda. This we know from many sources, including the fact that according to official figures, 2,992 Sri Lankans crossed the sea to Australia in the first eight months of this year, compared to 736 in the last twelve months of the war. The vast majority of them were Tamils. And this data includes only those who reached their destination, not those who are now being caught by the Navy on an almost daily basis. Everybody is debating whether or not they should be classified as refugees, as if it would be quite normal for so many people to want to undertake such a perilous journey for economic reasons – it is not.

In the North, the TNA will be the sole beneficiary of dissatisfaction with the Government. The party has its faults, but at least it won’t put up any more signboards in Sinhala and English in areas where Tamils make up 100% of the population. (I am taking a trivial example not because there aren’t more important things to be done, but to demonstrate that it is will as much as ideas and resources that is lacking.)

The TNA must know that its prospects are only going to improve the longer it is prevented from challenging the Government, so it isn’t going to feel at all pressured to fall into line.

The other point to note from the East is that the SLMC too increased its vote share. At the 2010 parliamentary elections, the SLMC and UNP together achieved 26.57% of the popular vote, increasing to 32.80% in 2012. The ever-hopeful supporters of Ranil Wickremesinghe may like to think that the UNP is the party whose fortunes improved, but that is plain silly. It achieved 11.82% of the popular vote in the provincial council elections, compared to 20.98% for the SLMC. And for their information, 11.82% is pretty close to zero! The UNP is in a deep hole, electorally speaking, but it is hard to feel sorry for people who believe that clinging to the same leader for nigh on two decades is perfectly normal.

If only their foolishness didn’t have such an impact on the rest of the country.

It is equally clear that the SLMC would not have had seven provincial councillors if it had run under Mahinda Rajapaksa. The party leadership’s rumoured decision to form an administration with the UPFA, going against the wishes of its members from the Eastern Province and likely also the views of its voters for the sake of concessions in Colombo, is not very democratic.

Totally undemocratic are the moves reported by DBS Jeyaraj to persuade five of the eleven provincial councillors from the TNA to switch their allegiance to the UPFA, which if they had been successful would have given the Government its all-important majority without the need for the support of the SLMC. DBS Jeyaraj says that the TNA representatives were approached by military intelligence operatives with a range of ‘carrots’ and ‘sticks’, including the offer to one provincial councillor who is also a building contractor of a major state infrastructure project and the threat to another that his young son would be taken into custody for alleged involvement with the LTTE.

As DBS Jeyaraj points out, attempts to engineer crossovers are nothing new, although the employment of military intelligence operatives certainly adds a novel and even more reprehensible dimension to the phenomenon.

Also, we don’t normally get to hear the details of the ‘carrots’ and ‘sticks’.

For this we should be grateful to the TNA. It has shown us what politics in Sri Lanka has become, and how difficult it will be to clean up – Mahinda Rajapaksa is clearly very good at engineering.

I hope that we will find more reasons to thank the party once elections are called in the North.

Although the TNA did not stand up to Prabhakaran, for which it deserves the harshest of criticism, it is willing to stand up to the Government. And it would be in a position to do so in the Northern Province. A TNA-led administration could do what most Sri Lankans now agree is necessary and show the Government that it cannot get away with everything everywhere. The danger for the TNA and indeed for Sri Lanka as a whole is that as things stand its positions and actions can easily be dismissed as sectarian and extremist, which could end up deepening the divisions in society and further entrenching the Government.

For that reason, and of course also as a matter of principle, the West should firmly resolve to say and do absolutely nothing.

It is only a matter of time before Mahinda Rajapaksa starts to fear elections.

Kath Noble’s column may be accessed online at http://kathnoble.wordpress.com. She may be contacted at kathnoble99@gmail.com.
Valvettith​urai youth abducted towards Horapottan​e
[ Wednesday, 19 September 2012, 02:04.49 PM GMT +05:30 ]
Chairman of the Valvettithurai Municipal Council A.Anandaran said group of majority community people have abducted a youth at Valvettithurai area and taken towards Horawapottana area.
Chairman made this statement during the district civil defence committee meeting held at the Jaffna district secretariat yesterday. Jaffna district Government Agent Sundaram Arumainayakam, Minister Douglas Devananda and several police officials were also present at this meeting.
Four days before group of individuals arrived in a van has abducted Jeyraja Janarthanan resident of Aathikoviladi on his return from the office.
Later on suspects have taken the victim towards house at Horapottana area and carried out alleged attack against him. Abductors have spoken in the Sinhala language. However youth escaped from their position have contacted his family members over phone call. At present victim receiving treatment at Velvettithurai base hospital.
Tamil weapon group did not involve in this abduction. It was unclear how can the abductors would be able to take away youth by passing through the Aanaiyiravu and Omanthai military check points. Such incidents have created fear among the area residents said Anandaraj.


The war may be over in Sri Lanka, but it is still not safe for journalists there
http://www.newssafety.org/images/logo-web.png
By Frances Harrison-SEPTEMBER 19, 2012

A Sri Lankan journalist reads the final report of Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation in Colombo, Sri Lanka, December 2011. The government-appointed war commission concluded that Sri Lanka’s military did not intentionally target civilians in the final stages of the country’s civil war and that ethnic rebels routinely violated international humanitarian law. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
I recently received a heartbreaking email saying a Sri Lankan journalist, his wife and nine year old child had spent the night with all their suitcases on a bench in a park in Paris. He’d been thrown out of the house where he was been staying, after losing his part time job washing dishes in a restaurant. It was difficult to organise emergency help because media organisations were shut over the weekend and his mobile phone was often switched off to preserve the credit.
The first thing you should know about this journalist is that he is Sinhalese – from the majority community in Sri Lanka, an island divided by decades of brutal ethnic war. Putting it very simply, the Sinhalese won the war in 2009, crushing a long running Tamil nationalist uprising. So it’s all the more surprising that a Sinhalese journalist should be in trouble.
Until recently it’s been the Tamil minority who’ve flooded out of Sri Lanka to seek asylum abroad. But in the last few years a steady trickle of Sinhalese journalists and activists have also fled. They were the more liberal and moderate minded, who opposed a military solution to crush Tamil nationalism – people, like the man in Paris, who could have had a very comfortable life if they’d chosen to toe the government line. Instead they paid a huge personal price for their integrity in speaking up for the “other” ethnic community. In some cases their own families even disown them.
Tamil journalists who escape abroad by no means have an easy time of it, but they do at least have established support networks in the diaspora. There are plenty of people to help them out if something goes wrong and they’re unlikely to end up on the streets. Not so the Sinhalese journalists who have absolutely no community to fall back on.
Psychologically the blow of exile is different too. The Tamil journalists have always known in the back of their minds that a time might come when they’d have to escape Sri Lanka. By contrast the Sinhalese journalists who are forced to leave are stunned to find they are no longer welcome in a place they always took for granted as their birthright.
One exiled Sinhalese journalist I know well was roundly attacked on Sri Lankan TV as a traitor earlier this year when the country was under pressure at the UN Human Rights Council over its record of war crimes during the 2009 culmination of the conflict. As a result of the news reports about him back home, all the other thirty Sinhalese families, except one, in his town in England refused to socialise with him any more. Because of being Sinhalese he’s also struggled to find a job in a petrol station because so many are owned by Tamils who wouldn’t hire him. He’s not just stateless but lacking any community.
In the past three years I’ve seen refugee photographers and editors I knew in Sri Lanka end up picking fruit in farms in Europe, working night shifts in factories, mopping floors and manning corner shops. They’ve struggled but have on occasion received extraordinary gestures of kindness from strangers. A fruit farm owner in Austria gave a Sinhalese photographer a new camera for his birthday when he heard his story. Staff in a library in Norway also clubbed together to buy a camera for a Tamil photographer, Lokeesan, who miraculously survived the brutal end to the civil war loosing all his possessions. In the case of the journalist in Paris it was a Nepali man who saved him initially – offering his family the use of his tiny room while he worked nightshifts.
That was until Tamil journalists came to his rescue, sending hard earned savings and arranging relatives in Paris to take him in to their homes on a temporary basis. That in itself is extraordinary. There are still many Sri Lankan Tamils abroad who would draw the line in helping Sinhalese, especially having them to stay. Reconciliation is talked about a lot but rarely practiced. There are decades of bitterness and bloodshed to overcome.
Among the Sri Lankan journalists I know in exile there’s a subtle transformation underway. Tamils and Sinhalese are gradually finding common cause, helping one another. The Tamil photographer, Lokeesan, only reached Norway because a total stranger, a Sinhalese journalist in exile, befriended him on Skype and helped him escape, filling in all the application forms in English for him. It was the first time the Lokeesan who grew up in the war zone had a Sinhalese friend; now they’re inseparable.
My Sinhalese journalist friend in England took a tortured Tamil journalist he didn’t know into his house, alongside his wife and children. The Tamil man’s kneecaps had been drilled and his genitals electrocuted; he woke everyone up in the asylum hostel every night with his screaming. My friend soothed him through the nightmares and then walked him back to the hostel every morning to sign back in. That they belonged on different sides of the ethnic divide did not matter to him – they were both fellow journalists. When I spoke to him last weekend he mentioned almost in passing that he had another Sinhalese reporter staying. That man arrived here four months ago after being attacked by government thugs and cut with knives all over his body, rendering his right hand permanently damaged. The war may be over in Sri Lanka but it’s still not safe for journalists there.
The Rory Peck Trust, dedicated to the safety and welfare of freelancers and their families in crisis, has been helping support Sri Lankan journalists in exile.
Frances Harrison is a former BBC Correspondent in Sri Lanka, among other places, and her book of survivors’ stories from the end of the civil war in Sri Lanka ‘Still Counting the Dead’ is published by Portobello Books on 4 October 2012.

Hakeem betrays Muslim community for perks and positions : Muslims will rebel against it - Sally
(Lanka-e-News-19.Sep.2012, 1.30PM) While the Tamil National alliance (TNA) issued a communiqué that the TNA and the Sri Lanka Muslim congress (SLMC) together can run the Eastern province (EP) provincial Council (PC) , A .Majeed of the UPFA was sworn in yesterday (18) as the chief minister of the PC before the President Mahinda Rajapakse.

Rauff Hakeem the leader of the SLMC and his party had made a historic betrayal of the Muslim community which had been opposing the Govt., by entering into a pact with the latter. According to that pact , a Muslim representative shall be appointed as the chief Minister of the EP for the first two and half years. The next two and half years , the SLMC representative , Nazeer Ahamed shall be appointed as the chief Minister. It is also learnt that the Govt. has consented to appoint another SLMC representative as a Minister in the Central Govt.

Majeed who was sworn in as the chief Minister contested the Trincomalee district under the UPFA and secured the third place in the preferential voting polling 11, 726 votes.

When the President had discussions on the 18th morning with the TNA , his subsequent actions had confirmed that he had invited the opposition parties to join the Govt. ( the communiqué issued by the TNA following the discussions with the President is given hereunder . The communiqué clearly reveals that the President had induced them .) 
Meanwhile Azad Sally who contested the EP provincial council under the SLMC warned that there can be a rebellion by the Muslim community which voted for the SLMC at the recent polls against the party for kicking away the people’s wishes and kowtowing to the Govt. for selfish perks and positions .

He also added that it was the wish of the Muslim community that it supports the TNA which had also agreed to concede the bonus seat at the forthcoming north PC elections to the SLMC .