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, October 9, 2012

Indian air space forbidden to SLAF planes
(Lanka-e-News-09.Oct.2012, 11.45PM) The Indian Air space has been made a forbidden zone for the SL Air Force. A SL Air force plane was not allowed to travel across the Indian Air space by India. Lanka e news is in receipt of such a report .

This forbidding order was given against a SL Air force plane which was carrying two young elephants namely , Jenita and Tamara , 8 and 7 years old respectively , to Czech republic , Prague Zoo on account of world children’s day .

The Czech republic in return had agreed to gift to the Dehiwala Zoo, a pair of crocodiles of the Commodore kind , a pair of hippopotamuses and a pair of horses.

The shortest route for the plane carrying the elephants was through the Indian air space. On the 6th from early morning 1.00 till 6.00 efforts were made to take the Indian air space route but without avail , as the Indian Govt.’s permission for the SL air Force plane to fly across India’s air space could not be obtained. Later the SL AF plane took the Sharjah route . Due to the delays and the heat wave in Sharjah, the elephants had faced severe hardships and just managed to escape death before reaching Prague . 

Meanwhile the warning issued to visitors from SL to Tamil nadu was withdrawn today .


International Commission Of Jurists Condemns Attack On The Judicial Services Commission

Colombo TelegraphThe Sri Lankan government must immediately provide justice for the physical assault on Manjula Tillekaratne, Secretary of the Judicial Services Commission in Sri Lanka, and cease public efforts to undermine the independence of the country’s judiciary, the International Commission of Jurists said today.
Unidentified persons assaulted the Secretary of the Judicial Services Commission on the morning of 7 October 2012.  Lawyers and judges held a strike on Monday to protest recent and escalating threats to judicial independence in Sri Lanka.
‘This physical assault is another terrible step downward in the ongoing effort to undermine the judiciary and the rule of law in Sri Lanka,’ said Sam Zarifi, ICJ’s Asia Director. ‘The Sri Lankan government has to investigate this event and bring the perpetrators to justice, and ensure that the country’s judges are secure from assault and intimidation.’
Earlier in September, the Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapksa had demanded a meeting with the Chief Justice and two members of the JSC.  The JSC refused the request, citing the implications of such a meeting on the independence of the judiciary.  The request came in the wake of the Supreme Court striking down a pending bill before the parliament – the “Divi Neguma Department Bill,” which proposed to establish a new department by amalgamating the Samurdhi Authority, Southern Development Authority and the Udarata Development Authority. If passed, the bill would confer wide powers to the Economic Development Minister as well as access to funds.
State-controlled print and electronic media then engaged in a public campaign of vilifying the Chief Justice and other members of the JSC who are also sitting Supreme Court Justices. On 18 September 2012, the JSC directed its Secretary to issue a public statement citing the baseless criticism of its members in the state electronic and print media.  The JSC indicated that it had been subjected to threats and intimidation.   Notably, the JSC said it was subjected ‘to various influences after the Commission initiated disciplinary action against a judge.’
On 28 September 2012, JSC Secretary Manjula Tillekaratne expressed concern for ‘the security of all of us and our families beginning from the person holding the highest position in the judicial system.’
‘The effort to use State-controlled media to browbeat and intimidate judges is an egregious assault on the independence and impartiality of Sri Lanka’s judiciary. An independent judiciary is a necessary precondition to safeguard human rights,’ said Zarifi.
The United Nations Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary makes clear that it is the responsibility of the State to respect and observe the independence of the judiciary, protecting judges from any improper influences, inducements, pressures, threats or interference.
In recent months, the independence of the judiciary has come under attack in Sri Lanka.  In July 2012, Government Minister Rishad Bathiudeen threatened a Magistrate in Mannar and then orchestrated a mob to pelt stones and set fire to part of the Mannar courthouse.  Lawyers and judges held a nation-wide strike to protest the incident.  The Bar Association of Sri Lanka as well as the Judges Association of Sri Lanka issued public statements condemning the attacks.
CONTACT:
Sam Zarifi, ICJ Asia-Pacific Regional Director, (Geneva)
t:+41(0) 22 979 38 00; email: sam.zarifi@icj.org
Sheila Varadan, ICJ Legal Advisor, South Asia Programme (Bangkok), t: +66 857200723; email: sheila.varadan@icj.org

A resolve to work



Magistrates and District Judges who participated in a special general assembly of the Judicial Services Association (JSC) are seen here leaving the Colombo District Court. During this general assembly Judicial Services Association decided to commence court proceeding from tomorrow onwards. Pix by Pradeep Dilrukshana





Academics question ICE deceit after Solheim's speech at London book launch
TamilNet[TamilNet, Monday, 08 October 2012, 22:01 GMT]
Reacting to arguments put forth by the panel of discussants at the London book launch event of Frances Harrison's 'Still Counting the Dead' on Friday, especially to the opinions of Norwegian politician and peace-broker Erik Solheim, Indian academic Radha D'Souza and UK-based academic Amanda Latimer, criticized the politics of deceit the International Community of Establishments (ICE) was playing with the Tamils. In exclusive videos to TamilNet, both Dr. D'Souza and Ms. Latimer came down hard on the Western Establishments and those working with vested interests for spreading misinformation to the Tamil diaspora about the liberation struggle of the Eezham Tamils.

The panellists at the event besides Mr Erik Solheim were Mr Alan Keenan, Sri Lanka project director in the International Crisis Group (ICG) and Ms Yasmin Sooka, member of the UNSG panel that brought out a report on the war in the island of Sri Lanka.

Earlier, at the book launch event, both Dr. D'Souza and Ms. Latimer had raised questions on the UK and India providing arms and other help to the genocide-accused Sri Lankan government. Their questions were not satisfactorily answered.

Dr. D'Souza and Ms. Latimer were interviewed by TamilNet during the book launch event of Ms. Frances Harrison in London on Friday.




Hot Seat with Mangala Samaraweera

 MP Mangala Samaraweera speaks on the University Teacher’s crisis, the pressure on the judiciary and the perceived stock market mafia. He also comments on “girlfriend companies”, the opposition’s preparation for an upcoming change and the Malaka Silva case. 
TUESDAY, 09 OCTOBER 2012


Preserving independence of Judiciary is most important

Recent decisions of the judiciary at the lower and higher levels have instilled greater confidence in the viability of a system of checks and balances that is necessary in a functioning democracy. The assault on the Secretary of the Judicial Services Commission has occurred in the context of tensions being reported between the executive and judicial branches of government. It has led to a crisis with judicial officers and lawyers boycotting court sittings.
Even though the National Peace Council is encouraged that the government has condemned this assault and the President has ordered a police investigation into the incident, we would like to see that investigations are concluded speedily and the culprits brought before a judicial process without delay. This will not only ensure the safety of judicial officials but enhance greater respect for the rule of law.
At the present time several important cases are before the courts of law which could have long lasting repercussions on the future of the country. In our view the most important of these is the legal challenge to the Divineguma bill which seeks to concentrate power in the central government at the expense of provincial councils. We trust that the Judiciary would stand its ground and not back down until the issue has been satisfactorily resolved and justice done.
If investigations on the attack carried out on the Secretary of the Judicial Services Commission lead to political hands behind it, those responsible for instigating such violence and crime should be exposed so that safe spaces can be created for members of the judiciary and politicians who espouse nonviolent politics in the country. This will help strengthen the democratic process and also help to outlaw violent politics in Sri Lanka.
National Peace Council of Sri Lanka
Governing Council
The National Peace Council is an independent and non partisan organization that works towards a negotiated political solution to the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka. It has a vision of a peaceful and prosperous Sri Lanka in which the freedom, human rights and democratic rights of all the communities are respected. The policy of the National Peace Council is determined by its Governing Council of 20 members who are drawn from diverse walks of life and belong to all the main ethnic and religious communities in the country.

Jaffna civil society concerned about Sri Lanka using UN teams

The SL government's initiatives are aimed at showing to the world that they are engaging with the international community, the Jaffna civil society activist cited inputs from the Colombo civil society.

Journalists in Jaffna say that the entire programme of the UN organisations are drafted and directed by the Colombo government. The visitors, received by the Commander of the occupying SL military are then directly taken to the SL Government Agent in Jaffna and officials. The visitors get opportunity restricted only to hearing the SL government versions such as that of its Human Rights Commission and seeing only the SL government hoodwinks, the journalists said.

The same ‘power point’ presentation is kept ready by the various government agencies, from the occupying military commander to the gagged civil officials to show to the visitors, the journalists further said.

Meanwhile, TamilNet's exposures of the International Organisation of Migration (IOM), the farce related to resettlement and reports related to the closure of the Cheddiku'lam IDP camp, have irked those who fund the IOM, particularly the British High Commission in Colombo, informed circles among the journalists said.

UN cartoon 2


JVP takes to the streets against abusing judicial independence

logoTUESDAY, 09 OCTOBER 2012
The agitation organized by the JVP under the theme ‘Condemn the blatant attack on the Judiciary’ was held yesterday (8th) opposite Fort Railway Station in Colombo.
The protesters condemned the attack on the Secretary to the Judiciary Service Commission Manjula Tillekeratne and demanded the government to bring the perpetrators before the law.
Speaking to the media the General Secretary of the JVP Tilvin Silva said by carrying out the attack the Judiciary has been humiliated and it exposes the interference carried out by the executive and the legislature on the judiciary. Mr. Silva said people in the country should rise against such undemocratic moves adding that the JVP was prepared to give leadership to such a movement.


Lawyers protest in Fort

Sri Lanka Guardian( October 8, 2012, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Lawyers are currently protesting in front of the Colombo Fort Magistrate’s Court over the attack on the Secretary of the Judicial Service Commission (JSC)  by an unidentified group.

Lawyers and judges have yesterday decided to boycott court proceeding over the attack, which took place in Mount Lavinia yesterday.

Judges to refrain from duties over yesterday's attack on JSC secretary

All judges will refrain from court duties today (Oct 8)  in protest of the attack on the Secretary of the Judicial Services Commission, Manjula Thilakarathne, the Judicial Officers Union said yesterday .
Tilakaratne was hospitalised yesterday following an alleged assault by a group of unidentified persons.

People Have Lost Confidence In The Failed Judiciary

Colombo Telegraph
By Mudliyar -October 9, 2012 
In any civilised democracy, as the fourth pillar of governance, the role of all forms of media is not to be aligned with the party in power or with the opposition but to uphold and protect the sovereign rights of the people from those who exercise peoples’ legislative, executive and judicial power held absolutely in trust.
Chief Justice Bandaranayake
In Sri Lanka, peoples’ rights are recognised and guaranteed by the supreme law of the land, the Constitution, and Colombo Telegraph is to committed to expose any organ of the government that abuses the peoples’ power held in trust. This is in fact the social obligation of any media institution that plays the role of the ‘watchdog of the people’, a responsibility and role that has been conveniently forgotten by most of the print and electronic media in the country.
Under the current Rajapaksa administration, there is a controlled attack on the judiciary under the leadership of Chief Justice Bandaranayake about which the people are well aware. Yet, it appears that although people are concerned about these deplorable attacks, they are not entirely happy with the egocentric and self-centred way the judiciary has functioned in this country that only benefits the legal fraternity (judges and the lawyers).
Three annual vacations found no other respected democracy
The court system of Sri Lanka is overloaded with cases and there is completely unacceptable delay in dispensing justice. This situation continues unabated from the Magistrate’s Court to the Supreme Court. It is sickening to observe that some cases pending before the District Courts are over 10 years old and in some cases, during their pendency most witnesses die or have gone abroad, making the administration of justice a futile exercise. This system, which continues with no protest or objection by the people, only benefit the lawyers and relieves the judges of their responsibility to dispense justice without delay.
In Sri Lanka there are three vacations declared by the court system, found in no other civilised democracy, and is truly an addition of insult to injury in the failed administration of justice system and probably the general public is not aware of this at all.  According to the judicial diary for the year 2013, the days already allocated for the so-called vacation are 13th January to 15th February 2013, 12thAugust to 26th August 2013, and 23rd December 15th January 2013. It is noted that even in England, the country that installed their justice system in this country, there is no such vacation system, which they probably practiced during the colonial period. Modern British government has completely done away with this relaxed justice system that serves not the people that it is supposed to serve, but the legal fraternity, the judges and the lawyers who operate the justice system.
Appalling administration of fundamental rights jurisdiction
In Sri Lanka there are some fundamental rights that are recognised by the Constitution (the right to life recognised by the UDHR has been left out) and under the law, the executive is required to respect and honour these rights enjoyed by the people.
In all cases where people make complaint to the Supreme Court of violations of their fundamental rights, the Supreme Court is required under the law to inquire into such complaints and pronounce its determination within two months of the filing of such complaints to the Supreme Court [Article 126 (5) of the Constitution].
It is worthwhile to examine how this actually operates under the justice system in Sri Lanka. The Supreme Court sits at 10.30 am and almost everyday finishes its business around 01.00 pm. And as a matter of routine business most of the cases comes up before it are postponed for the convenience of the judges and the lawyers.
From the viewpoint of the people, this practice adopted by the judges, who are maintained by the public funds, is completely unacceptable. Yet battered people who are taken for a ride by the system have nobody to complain to about the abuse of the system by both judges and lawyers.
The law requires [Article 126(5) of the Constitution] that the Supreme Court shall hear and determine fundamental rights applications within two moths from filing. Yet for the convenience of the judges and the lawyers, the Court has held that it is not bound by the said provision of law enacted for the effective administration of fundamental rights of the people. Clearly this flawed interpretation of the law had been done with no respect to the rights of the people, whose judicial power is exercised by the judges but for the convenience of the judges and lawyers, who undertake any number of cases that come their way. This is one of the best examples of the way the trust placed on the judges by the people have been violated by them.
Surely, the people, openly betrayed by the executive, do not condone the attack launched on the judiciary by the executive, yet the people hold the judiciary itself responsible for the grave and irresponsible lapses on its part, and for their contributory negligence and self-centred attitude for the sorry state of affairs in the judicial system that serve not the people, but is run in an appalling way serving only those who exercise the peoples’ judicial power and those who are in the legal profession, whose awful behaviour and conduct is never reported to the people by the judiciary, that is accountable to the people for due administration of justice.
Four druggies to be blamed for the attack on JSC Secretary
Tuesday, 09 October 2012
Four druggies are to be blamed for the attack on the Judicial Services Commission (JSC) Secretary Manjula Thilekaratne on Sunday morning, police sources said.
A special police investigations unit has carried out a clearing operation in Mount Lavinia and surrounding areas to apprehend drug users and dealers and a large number of persons had been arrested. Sources said the attempt is to pick four of the arrested lot and ask them to confess to attacking Thilekaratne.
They are to be forced into stating that they had attacked the secretary to rob him and not based on any political agendas.
Meanwhile, it is also learnt that another special police investigations unit is exploring the possibility of blaming additional district judge Aravinda Perera, who has been suspended from work, or the Naula Magistrate’s father for the attack.
Also, President’s coordinating secretary for parliamentary affairs, Kumarasiri Hettige had met the Anuradhapura High Court Judge, Gamini Edirisinghe and asked him to give an affidavit saying he has faced undue pressure from the JSC Secretary. Hettige has been assigned the task of carrying out the campaign against the Chief Justice and the JSC Secretary by the President.
The judge has been promised a promotion and diplomatic posting when he retires.
Reliable sources say that information gathered by Hettige from various members of the judiciary are studied and compiled in a legal manner before publishing under supervision of Chief Justice and Presidential Advisor Ashoka de Silva.

Southern workers sexually harass Tamil women in East

TamilNet[TamilNet, Sunday, 07 October 2012, 23:13 GMT]
Some of the workers from South who are brought down to Eastern province by the Colombo government, which employs them in road construction and electricity supply ‘development’ work in the Eastern province, engage in sexual abuse of Tamil women, civil sources in Batticaloa say citing two cases this week alone. At Vaazhaichcheanai, a 38-year-old mother of five, A Sinnappillai, was killed after sexual abuse by at least two Sinhala men and the body of the victim was found dumped in a pit upside down. At Vellaave'li, a man from Matara, caught by the villagers after he attempted to sexually harass a 17-year-old Tamil girl on Thursday, was allowed to go unpunished by the Sinhala policemen. 

On Monday, two Sinhalese workers had gone to the house of Ms Sinappillai, whose livelihood was dependent on the income from selling cooked food from her house situated at Ki'n'naiyadi Ku'lakkoaddan village in Vaazhaichcheani division of Batticaloa district.

When she came out, she was gagged and was forcibly removed to the nearby jungle by the two men. 

Later, she was allegedly subjected to sexual abuse and murdered. 

The injuries found on the body have created suspicion among the medical staff and the body has been sent to the Colombo Hospital for further medical examination.

The sources at Batticaloa Teaching Hospital told TamilNet on condition of anonymity that medical authorities in Colombo are reluctant in issuing medical reports confirming rape on similar cases in the past. 

The deceased woman was displaced from her village Chaaraave'li during 2007 war and was residing at Ku'lakkoaddan village with her children. 

On Thursday a Sinhalese worker was attempting to sexually abuse a seventeen year old girl at Vellaave'li area. 

On hearing cries from the girl, the villagers rushed to the site and caught the man.

He was then taken to the Chairman of the Piratheasa Chapai (PS) who is a Pillayan group man. 

However, the Sinhala policemen providing ‘security’ to the paramilitary man had allowed the suspect to go free, the disappointed villagers say.

Sinhalese workers from the southern province in large number are deployed in electric infrastructure and road construction works along the main road in Batticaloa district while Tamil youths are unemployed in the province.

Finger prints found in the vehicle of Manjula Tilakaratn​e: Police

[ Tuesday, 09 October 2012, 11:57.42 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Police announced they have found two figure prints from the vehicle of Manjula Tilakaratne, Secretary of the Judiciary Services Commission.
Police hold investigations on these finger prints.
They also hold investigations on telephone conversation at the area.
Police media spokesman Ajith Rohana stated they have collected evident from 6 individuals and Colombo crime investigation unit hold further investigations this regard, he said.

‘We Have Lost Both The Times I Have Gone To The Ground’ – Mahinda Rajapaksa

By Colombo Telegraph -October 9, 2012 
Colombo Telegraph“‘We have lost both the times I have gone to the ground, so I now prefer to watch cricket on TV,’ he said in a lighter vein, before saying he ‘may just turn up.’”  Times of India reports. President Mahinda Rajapaksa made this remarks with Times of India at the Temple Trees on the eve of the final World Twenty20.
On the eve of the final, Sri Lanka president Mahinda Rajapaksa invited the media for a dinner party at the Temple Trees.



SRI LANKA: New wave of brainwashing


AHRC Logo
Contributors: Nilantha Ilangamuwa-October 9, 2012

AHRC-ART-094-2012.JPG"An ignorant mind believes itself omniscient and omnipotent; those impulses in itself which really represent the inertia and unspent momentum of its last dream it regards as the creative forces of nature." --  Life of Reason: Reason in Common Sense- George Santayana

Despite all protests by the public, the Secretary to the Ministry of Defence, who is retired lieutenant colonel of the Sri Lanka Army, a green card holder of the United States of America, and one of brothers of the President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, has appointed select school principals as "brevet colonels." In yesterday's ceremony that marked the occasion, the Secretary minced no words when he opined about failures of the nation. He claimed that the recent loss of the Sri Lankan team in the cricket world cup final was due to a lack of self-confidence in the players. Any laughter such statements might bring are tempered by a realization of the size of the Sri Lankan tragedy. It is the direct result of a real curse -- that of handing power to dangerous criminals having a blinkered take on reality and disrespect for law or humanity.
This curious militarization of state schools, which involves selecting school principals after 10 days of armed training and appointing them as "brevet colonels", may well have another agenda beyond the obvious. Control of the armed forces after the war, as well as the arrest of the former army chief, who led the country to victory, has been a debacle. Many veterans have been forced into retirement and the possibility of internal conflict hung in the air. The regime thus felt it had to think about, not only appointing a few yes men, but, also of destroying the dignity and power of the service.

As a result, the country's head of intelligence was tasked to deliver a political statement that justified the ruling family. Just as in politics today, the military setup in the country has lost its independence to decide what it should and should not do. Gotabaya Rajapaksa did not deem it necessary to give "brevet colonelships" to the parliamentarians, because he knows there will not be a revolt against the ruling family within the paralyzed and lifeless members of the legislative, which is under the firm control of the executive.

In the piping ceremony, those appointed as "brevet colonels" received their certificates attired in army uniform. This unusual, rare, occasion has perhaps created a fear worse than anything Stalinism or Nazism might hold over the future of the country and the freedom of its people. The man who sees everything through the barrel of a gun may never understand the value of freedom. In other words, as political history has taught us, the man who believes in armed power, rather than power through knowledge, will gain destruction more than construction.

The universities countrywide have been on strike for more than three months, and every education institutions is lifeless, while thousands of students find themselves in darkness devoid of a future with a clear direction. The government is creating an "our guy" culture to cynically manipulate the people of the country. Nonetheless, what the regime believes it needs to achieve is the creation of the culture of silence to mock the stated missions of the schools. In this way, the regime can place the entire island's student bodies in a cage, where no one can refuse whatever instructions come from the Ministry of Defence, which controls one fourth of the national budget.

As recent news reports indicated, the biggest allocation from the 2013 Budget will go to the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development, as it was in the previous year, with nearly Rs. 290 billion. This amount shows an increase of nearly Rs. 60 billion from what was allocated to the Defence and Urban Development Ministry in 2012. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Education has been allocated Rs. 37.9 billion, up by around Rs. 3.43 billion over 2012, while the Ministry of Higher Education has been allocated Rs. 27.9 billion, up by around Rs 4.1 billion over 2012. This is a number game in a country where more than 20 million people live, but 70% of the national budget is controlled by one family. Experiences in daily life has taught Sri Lankans to accept that the ruling family is incapable of understanding or does not care enough to find the real meaning of life in the common society.

In the words of John Locke, "knowledge is the perception of the agreement or disagreement of two ideas." But, what the present regime is forcing students to follow is entirely different. In other words, the regime is engaging in methods that were used during the Nazism and Stalinism where education was none other than a tool of total social control.

The whole idea about "social realism" was introduced by Stalin, who was known as "Uncle Joe" in USSR, and it taught people to glorify the leadership. Stalin banned all other resources to history and created a new history called the "short history of the USSR" to be taught at schools. Education was strictly controlled by the state. In 1932, a rigid programme of discipline and education was introduced. But, the amusing thing is that in the Sri Lankan context, the Ministry of Defence is intervening in local education, while the children of ruling party members are studying and establishing their personal lives in schools and universities located in the west.  For them, Sri Lanka is just like a casino board, and the people of Sri Lanka are the dupes. Like in the Nazi education system, in Sri Lanka, the purpose of education is no longer personal development, but to prepare the individual for service to the ruling family.

Education must be free for everyone; the right to choose is a basic right. But the ruling family, which has created its "tremendous" power throughout the prevailing ‘democratic electoral' system is engaging in the destruction of personal liberty to undermine the possibility of revolt against the unjust. Meanwhile, the militarization of state schools is showing us how personal liberties can and are being buried by a wave of brainwashing.


'Death toll in LTTE war HIGHER than Srebrenica, Syria'

October 9, 2012 
Rediff.comThe war against the LTTE, waged by the Mahinda Rajapakse government, may have restored peace in Sri Lanka. But thousands of Tamils paid the price for the so-called victory with their lives, journalist Frances Harrison tells Vicky Nanjappa.
The annihilating battle against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, waged by the Mahinda Rajapakse government, may have ultimately restored peace in Sri Lanka. But thousands of Tamils have paid the price for this so-called victory with their lives, journalist Frances Harrison reports in her new book Still Counting the Dead.
This photograph released by the Sri Lankan military on May 18, 2009 shows the battle scene near where LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran was located
'Caught in the crossfire were hundreds of thousands of schoolchildren, doctors, farmers, fishermen, nuns and other civilians. And the government ensured through a strict media blackout that the world was unaware of their suffering,' Harrison states in her book.
Harrison, a veteran BBC correspondent who has reported from South Asia, South East Asia and Iran, was the resident BBC correspondent in Sri Lanka between 2000 and 2004.
She has worked at Amnesty International as Head of News and while writing this book, served as a visiting research fellow at Oxford University.
Frances Harrison spoke to Rediff.com's Vicky Nanjappa in an exclusive interview.
How has your book been received?
There has been criticism from parties on both sides of the war, but many ordinary Tamils around the world who have read it have thanked me for telling these stories.
At the book launch in London, a burly Tamil man rushed up to me. He had tears in his eyes. He gave me a huge hug, said 'Thank you' and walked off crying.
Please click NEXT for more...  Next

Sri Lankan minister Champika Ranawaka with President Mahinda Rajapaksa  (File image-Daily Mirror)Catholic Church News Image of Displaced Tamils protest for access to land

 Supplying electricity to Jaffna is a loss to the country – Patali

Sri Lanka: Minister threatens Tamils with 'hundred more massacres'



18 JUNE 2012
A Sri Lankan cabinet minister has threatened with 'hundred more massacres' unless the island's Tamil population avoid following the politics of the main Tamil parliamentary group. The warning came during a news conference on the 8 June in Colombo.

Supplying electricity to Jaffna is a loss to the country – Patali

logo
TUESDAY, 09 OCTOBER 2012
Supplying electricity to Jaffna is a colossal loss says the Minister of Power and Energy Patali Champika Ranawaka.
He has said supplying electricity to Jaffna incurs a loss of Rs. 3000 million a year for the CEB.
The reason for this loss is due to the inability to add Jaffna to the national grid said the Minister.
As a result of the war situation that prevailed in the country a few years ago the network of electrical supply to Jaffna was destroyed.

Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations


Sri Lankan minister Champika Ranawaka with President Mahinda Rajapaksa  (File image-Daily Mirror)
Sri Lankan minister Champika Ranawaka with President Mahinda Rajapaksa (File image-Daily Mirror)
A senior Sri Lankan minister considered close to President Mahinda Rajapaksa has threatened the Tamils they would face annihilation if they continued to harbour homeland ambition.
The threat by power and energy minister Champika Ranawaka that there would 'one hundred more Mullivaikkals' has caused deep consternation among the Tamil leaders here, with DMK president M Karunanidhi writing to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to tell Colombo 'to adopt a course of restraint and humanitarianism'.
Mullivaikkal in northeastern coast of Sri Lanka was the final ‘killing field’ in the Eelam war that saw the death of thousands of Tamils—including civilians and LTTE cadres led by Velupillai Prabhakaran—in May 2009. International communities, including the UNHRC, have been demanding investigation of army excesses during that last brutal phase of the war.
By threatening that there could be a hundred Mullivaikkals, Ranawaka, was trying to resurrect Sinhala racist hatred against the minority Tamils, said PMK founder Dr S Ramadoss and VCK chief Thol. Thirumavalan.
His remarks “are highly provocative and therefore condemnable”, said Karunanidhi in his letter to the PM, adding, “The Tamils all over the world are very much perturbed over the reprehensible remarks of the Sri Lankan Minister”.
Ranawaka, who is the leader of the Sinhala rightwing Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), a constituent of the ruling coalition, had made his incendiary statement at a news conference in Colombo on June 8 while reacting to the speech of Tamil National Alliance leader R. Sampanthan at the national convention of the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK), which is part of the TNA.
Expressing anguish at the failure of the Rajapaksa government to come up with a solution to the Tamil issue, Sampanthan had said that the position that the north and the east of Sri Lanka are the areas of historical habitation of the Tamil-speaking people “cannot be compromised”.
“We must have unrestricted authority to govern our own land, protect our own people, and develop our own economy, culture and tradition. A meaningful devolution should go beyond the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. If the Sri Lankan state continuously deny this right, we will claim our right under international law to external self-determination”.
Angered by Sampanthan’s speech, minister Ranawaka said, “Does Sampanthan want to create 100 more Mullivaikkals? We are ready to forgive and forget the past and think about the future. But if Sampanthan is calling us to fight, our nation would proudly accept the challenge”.
This is not the first time that Ranawaka has provoked anger from the Tamils and even the rights activists among the majority Sinhala population in Sri Lanka.
The ‘National Movement Against Terrorism’ (NMAT), a hardline Sinhala outfit campaigning against pro-Tamil activists and media persons during the peak of Eelam war early 2007, had put up posters calling for ‘annihilation’ of ‘white Tigers, media Tigers, leftist Tigers’ and Ranawaka said though he was not a member of NMAT, he backed that poster.
He had then called pro-Tamil protesters 'scum feeding on foreign money' and even advocated extra-judicial methods to eliminate the 'treacherous bastards'.