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

Wednesday, October 31, 2012


Stock Market Crisis and Oligarchic Interests

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by Ahilan Kadirgamar-August 25, 2012
The resignation last week of Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairperson Tilak Karunaratne, after he blamed "a mafia of high net worth investors and their crony stockbrokers" for mobilising political pressure, has further exposed the crisis in the stock market. Over the last year, there has been much discussion of two aspects of this crisis. First, the collapse of the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) from one of the best performing markets in the world two years ago - when the market value of the CSE quadrupled from the end of the war to its peak within two years - to one of the worst performing markets this year. Second, reports of increasing political interference, market manipulation with the resignations of SEC Chairperson Indrani Sugathadasa late last year and now Karunaratne. The first aspect of the crisis relates to the returns from financial investments and the second to the regulations that are in place to ensure the so-called smooth functioning of the stock market.

A crisis reveals contradictions. A crisis also invites for good or bad interventions by various actors attempting to consolidate their interests, including those claiming to resolve the crisis. The difficult question is how such crisis relate to the unravelling and consolidation of regimes.
Boom and Bust                           Read More...

Sri Lanka: A look at the Rajapaksas prior to the UPR

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Guest Column:  By Usha Sriskandarajah-Dated 29-Oct-2012
As Sri Lanka’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR) gets underway on November 1, 2012, the Rajapaksas seem impregnable, their grip on power stronger than ever before.
The Rajapaksas have so much at stake at Sri Lanka’s UPR what with "credible allegations" of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity hanging over their heads and an awful human rights record to defend, with a poor ‘action plan’ that would not end or investigate abuses. It’s obvious the administration is doing everything to impress the key players selected for the review process but thus far their submissions show that the administration has made very little progress in implementing the recommendations of the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), the main thrust of the resolution passed at the 19th session of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC).
The Rajapaksas wield absolute power in Sri Lanka, Theirs is essentially a ‘one family rule’ bolstered by political patronage and the unwavering support of the Sinhala Buddhist Sangha; a dictatorship that has now embraced the extremist Sinhala Buddhist supremacist philosophy as a means of survival; the JHU and JVP now playing only second fiddle.
Nepotism and corruption are the norm in Sri Lanka.
The last ‘US Country Reports on Human Rights Practices’ made particular mention of the ‘family rule’ in Sri Lanka : The government is dominated by the President’s (Mahinda Rajapaksa) family; two of the President’s brothers hold key executive branch posts as defence secretary and the minister of economic development, while a third brother is the speaker of Parliament," the report said.
Additionally Namal Rajapaksa the son is now known to be the anointed successor to the father, Mahinda.
The Rajapaksa brothers and their families together control 70% of the country’s budget. The ‘Divineguma Bill’ that has created much controversy, apart from the much resented 18th amendment, is in itself designed to bolster the executive presidency over provincial councils, increase avenues for amassing more wealth and to fortifying the family’s hold on power.
A statement by the former US Assistant Secretary of State for public affairs, Philip J. Crowley expressing his view on the 18th amendment bulldozed through parliament by the Rajapaksas within a span of day, illustrates the extent of that power: (The 18th amendment) "eliminates term limits for the president and expands the power of the president over independent institutions, including the elections, police, and human rights commissions, as well as the judiciary. The United States is concerned that this constitutional amendment weakens checks and balances and thus undermines the principles of constitutional democracy. The United States calls on the Government of Sri Lanka to promote the principles of good governance, democracy, and independent State institutions.  The United States looks to the government to take measures that will strengthen democracy including appointing appropriately qualified officials to bolster independent institutions, increase transparency, enhance power sharing and dialogue, and promote national reconciliation," the statement held.
During his recent visit to Sri Lanka in September, Robert O’ Blake, the US Assistant Secretary of State expressly mentioning corruption, has called on
Sri Lanka to "cut corruption and create transparent processes for investors and also avoid unpredictable actions such as expropriating property." The resignations of Securities and Exchange Commission Chief Tilak Karunaratne and his predecessor Indrani Sugathadasa are indicative of the corruption that is endemic everywhere in the country. Ahilan Kadirgamar in his article ‘Stock Market Crisis and Oligarchic Interests’ explains the crisis in the stock market, quoting Tilak Karunaratne as blaming "a mafia of high net worth investors and their crony stockbrokers" for his resignation.
Tisaranee Gunasekera for the Sunday Chronicle in an article ‘Corruption as a Tool of Rajapaksa Rule’ exposes some of the irregularities the Rajapaksas and in this case Basil Rajapaksa is involved in: Basil Rajapaksa and "Maga Neguma" (Improving Roads) are accused of by the "Committee on Public Enterprises" (COPE) for "defaulting road-contractors of "a massive Rs 1.2 billion". She writes, "The defrauded contractors have not sought legal redress because they fear Rajapaksa’s ire, according to a COPE member.
The Rajapaksa family rules with an iron fist. Most at the receiving end are frightened to speak openly of the anomalies, Tisaranee explains: The officials of Maga Neguma act as if they are above the law. They do not submit their accounts to the Auditor General; according to a COPE member, "they even produced letters from the Attorney General’s department to support their argument that the COPE has no powers to probe them". Such arrogant insouciance is natural in a familial state. Lankan officials, like Lankan politicians, know that they can break laws and contravene rules with impunity, so long as they do not commit the cardinal sin of opposing the Rajapaksas.
The Rajapaksas still basking in their victory against the LTTE use that victory as their rallying point, the Sinhala South blinded to the prevailing Rajapaksa autocracy. With Gotabaya Rajapaksa at the helm at the Défense Ministry and the biggest allocation from the 2013 Budget going to the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development amounting to nearly Rs. 290 billion" showing an increase of nearly Rs. 60 billion from what was allocated for defence in 2012, the Rajapaksas have the loyalty and the might of the army behind them.
In an article "Near site of LTTE’s last stand, a victory memorial that Tamils don’t visit" for The Hindu, Nirupama Subramanian writes about the victory memorial that has been erected in the very spot "where thousands of Tamil civilians are believed to have been killed during the military’s last successful push against the LTTE," which she adds, "…stands as a powerful assertion of that victory." This demonstration of triumphalism pursued to further entrench the family’s hold on power is not going to bring about the promised reconciliation.
In a troubling development, the Defense Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, has appointed select school principals as "brevet colonels," which could be implemented across the board to all schools island wide. "This curious militarization of state schools" according to press reports "involves selecting school principals after 10 days of armed training and appointing them as "brevet colonels", complete with uniform and title.
The Rajapaksas have not allowed international human rights organisations or the international media free access into the country especially to the North and East. They have muzzled local journalists to the extent that those who have dared to speak out against the administration have been murdered, disappeared or forced to go into self exile.
The ‘White Van’ abductions that are common place in Sri Lanka is a method widely used to stifle and silence their opponents.
The Rajapaksas have not spared the judiciary either. The independence of the judiciary is under threat in Sri Lanka with the Rajapaksas showing real contempt for the rule of law attacking a Supreme Court ruling relating to the ‘Divineguma Bill’ resulting in the Chief Justice being summoned by a government minister that’s quite unheard of under the principles of separation of powers. Recent attack on the judiciary in Mannar by a Cabinet Minister and assault on a District Judge Manjula Tillakaratne by unidentified persons are clear examples say The Friday Forum, a group of legal and political luminaries, of the "erosion of democracy and judicial independence" in Sri Lanka under the Rajapaksas.
The fraudulent Eastern Provincial Council Elections saw the Rajapaksa’s whole government machinery and support systems including intelligence personnel being utilized to rig the elections. It has been reported by the leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) that at least five Tamil candidates were offered cash and other material incentives to switch allegiance.
The ‘US Country Reports on Human Rights Practices’ commenting on the last "presidential and parliamentary elections as problematic," further held that "Both elections were fraught with violations of the election law by all major parties and were influenced by the governing coalition’s massive use of state resources. There were instances in which elements of the security forces acted independently of civilian control," the report said.
These fraudulent election practices are ominous of things to come and do not augur well for future free and fair elections; a trend that is seen as firmly establishing Mahinda Rajapaksa and his family dynasty in power indefinitely.
In an article Remembering Sri Lanka’s Killing FieldsGareth Evans, Australia’s foreign minister for eight years and President Emeritus of the International Crisis Group, currently Chancellor of the Australian National University and co-chair of the Global Center for the Responsibility to Protect, has homed in on what he termed as "mass atrocity crimes" committed in Sri Lanka in 2009 chiding the world for "selective memory":
One of the worst atrocity crime stories of recent decades has barely registered in the world’s collective conscience. We remember and acknowledge the shame of Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, and Darfur. We agonize about the failure to halt the atrocities being committed almost daily in Syria. But, at least until now, the world has paid almost no attention to war crimes and crimes against humanity comparable in their savagery to any of these: the killing fields of Sri Lanka in 2009.
Despite this clarion call to the governments of the world by Gareth Evans, the Rajapaksas who have set themselves up in power in such a way, guaranteeing for themselves a hold on the presidency in Sri Lanka for life are not going to be willing to hold themselves to account through a credible domestic mechanism; they will not lend themselves to international independent scrutiny in this UPR or 2013 UN HRC Sessions either– unless the UN HRC is ready to act decisively.
The views expressed are author’s own. She can be reached at  e-mail: sris19@sympatico.ca

WikiLeaks: US On Sri Lanka’s 2008 UPR Strategy At UN

By Colombo Telegraph -October 31, 2012 
Colombo Telegraph“Samarasinghe is an important interlocutor, especially in the conext of the Consultative Committee on Humanitaria Access (CCHA), which he chairs. Our recent intractions with him on human rights issues have beenless productive, with Samarasinghe often appearing to be engaged in simple damage control efforts. Defending Sri Lanka’s spotty human rights record is a difficult task, and Samarasinghe in this meeting appeared uncharacteristically nonplussed. The upcoming UPR will constitute a major opportunity for member states to question Sri Lanka on its failure to address human rights concerns. Samarasinghe is well aware of this and is seeking to use this to prod action on the Constitutional Council and perhaps other concerns.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
Sri Lanka’s Mahinda Samarasinghe before a special session of the Human Rights Council. Photo by Jean-Marc Ferre/United Nations
A classified diplomatic cable which details a meeting then US Ambassador to Colombo Robert Blake has had with Human Rights Minster Mahinda Samarasinghe on January 25, 2008 The Colombo Telegraph found the related cable from WikiLeaks database. The cable is classified as “Confidential” signed by Robert Blake on February 11, 2008.
Ambassador Blake wrote  ”Ambassador met Human Rights Minster Mahinda Samarasinghe on January 25 to discuss a range of U.S. concerns about Sri Lanka’s human rights situation, including recent incidents. Samarasinghe explained Sri Lanka’s strategy for engagement with the UN Human Rights Council, emphasizing the GSL’s resistance to a separate office for the staff of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), but expressing willingness to accept technical assistance for Sri Lanka’s national Human Rights Commission. Samarasinghe made clear that Sri Lanka was opposed to discussing its human rights performance in a Special Session of the HRC, but was preparing its submission for the Universal Periodic review in mid-May. Samarasinghe appeared at times to be at a loss to account for discrepancies in government accounts of several human rights incidents and recent developments.”
“Minister Samarasinghe told Ambassador and Pol Chief on January 25 that the GSL was engaged in a full-press effort to prepare for the Universal Periodic review (UPR) of Sri Lanka in mid-May 2008. Samarasinghe said Sri Lanka welcomed the opportunity for a discussion of its human rights record “in a controlled atmosphere,” indicating that the GSL would resist any effort to place Sri Lanka on the agenda of a Special Session. Sri Lankan government entities such as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Attorney General’s Office, and the Human Rights Commission were all working on Sri Lanka’s submission to the UPR, which would be due in March. Samarasinghe said he had exhorted his colleagues to try to make progress on the international community’s concerns between now and May, confiding that he would not be comfortable going into such a review based on the current state of play. ‘I told them they need to give me something to work with.’” Blake further wrote.
Related posts;
Read the cabale below for further details ; SRI LANKA: MINISTER’S STRATEGY FOR ENGAGEMENT WITH HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

INLAND REVENUE EMPLOYEES DEMAND PAY RISE

October 31, 2012 
Inland Revenue employees demand pay riseThe Inland Revenue Employees’ General Union staged a protest today (31) demanding a pay rise to meet the increasing cost of living. The protest took place in front of the Inland Revenue Department. (Pic by Manjula Charantha)


Government Questioned Ahead Of UPR

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

  • Total of 99 countries to speak on Sri Lanka
By Easwaran Rutnam
Several countries have submitted advance questions to Sri Lanka on human rights issues and the Northern Provincial Council elections, ahead of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) on Sri Lanka to be held in Geneva on Thursday.
The United States, Britain, Canada, Spain, Denmark, Mexico, the Czech Republic and the Netherlands are among the countries which have submitted questions to Sri Lanka.
Meanwhile a total of 99 countries have been listed to speak on Sri Lanka during the review, with each country having a minute and 12 seconds.
The report on Sri Lanka will then be adopted on Monday, November 5 after the views of the government and other countries are taken into consideration.
In its questions submitted in advance, the United States has asked why there is a delay in holding elections for the Northern Provincial Council, and what can the government do to move the election date up from September 2013.
The US has also asked what the status is of the Witness and Victim Protection Bill that the Government committed to passing during the 2008 UPR first cycle.
It also questioned the status of the investigations into the Channel 4 video, the assassination of five students in Trincomalee (January 2006), the execution of 17 ACF aid workers in Muttur (August 2006), the murder of 10 workers in Pottuvil (September 2006), the assassination of The Sunday Leader Editor Lasantha Wickrematunge (January 2009), and the disappearance of cartoonist Prageeth Eknaligoda (January 2010).
“Given that not all the recommendations of the LLRC report were included in the LLRC Action Plan, what will happen to those recommendations that were not included? Will the recommendations not included in LLRC Action Plan be implemented at a future date? How does the Government propose to carry out an independent assessment on the progress of the activities in the LLRC Action Plan?” the United States asked.
Meanwhile Canada noted that although the Menik Farm IDP camp was closed in September 2012, not all IDPs were able to return to their original homes, and there are concerns that relocations were not done in accordance with international standards.
Canada has asked when the Government of Sri Lanka will enact a Right to Information Act to ensure greater transparency for its citizens and what the Government has done to implement devolution of powers stipulated in the 13th Amendment to the Constitution.
Britain has meanwhile sought an update on the progress made by the Court of Inquiry appointed by the Sri Lankan Army to investigate allegations of war crimes and if the deliberations of that Court will be made available to the public.
“We would be grateful to know whether the government of Sri Lanka will issue an invitation to the six UN Special Procedures that have outstanding requests for visits.  If so, when?” the note sent by Britain said. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay and the Sri Lankan government have already submitted their reports for the UPR on Sri Lanka.
The UPR involves a review of the human rights records of all 192 UN Member States once every four years.

Call to expose Sri Lanka abuses

THE AUSTRALIAN
  • From:The Australian 
  • October 31, 2012 12:00AM
  • THE UN is under pressure to expose Sri Lanka's failure to improve its human rights record when it scrutinises the country's progress in a four-year review tomorrow.
    The Sri Lankan government has said it is prepared for the review and has sent a high-powered delegation to Geneva for tomorrow's sitting in which almost 100 countries have signalled their desire to question the nation over its rights record.
  • Shout to resolve nurses' issues
    WEDNESDAY, 31 OCTOBER 2012
    Nurses’ unions today staged a protest outside the Health Ministry urging the authorities to introduce a new recruitment process for nurses. Pix by Kushan Pathiraja

    The Final Medal For A Major’s Service

    By Chanaka Roshan-Wednesday, October 31, 2012
    Rehan Wijeratne (L) and Malak Silva (R) had allegedly assaulted Major Susena.
    The Military Intelligence Corps (MIC) is like the heart of a country’s defence force. In the Eelam war, this particular unit in the Sri Lanka Armed Forces made a painstaking effort to gather and retrieve information about the activities in Tiger controlled areas and about their leaders. It was because of the unique talents of these men, hard core LTTE leaders like “Newton” got disappeared in the streets of Colombo. It was the MIC which terrorized the terrorists.
    The track record of the MIC in the line of duty extends to greater extents like obtaining critical information to send senior tiger leaders like Thamil Selvam to meet their maker. As a group who were invincible to the terrorists were so powerful that no one dared to challenge them. But the war has ended. Once war heroes who were decorated and worshiped by the politicos are now play things for their off springs. And the most recent act of valour conducted by two “Minister Sons” has made the once mighty task force start to tremble.
    The siblings who started this foul play are Malaka Silva and Rehan Wijerathne. Malaka is the son of Minister Mervin Silva. And Rehan is the son of Former Minister Mano Wijerathne. And Malaka holds a dirty track record of thug acts at five star hotels.

    WikiLeaks: ‘We Will Make Sure The Report To Congress Is Identified As Secondary Source Reporting’ – Blake To Gota

    By Colombo Telegraph -October 31, 2012
    http://www.dailymirror.lk/images/logo(2).jpg“Blake said that the report requested by Congress on potential violations of international humanitarian law and crimes against humanity committed during the final stages of the conflict is expected to be released in mid to late October. It is secondary source reporting and we will make sure it is identified as such, Blake said.” the US State Department wrote to US Embassy Colombo. 
    Blake
    “However, part of political reconciliation is identifying an accountability process to deal with past human rights abuses and look at what occurred in the final stages of the war. Rajapaksa responded that commissions like these are going to tear the people apart, suggesting that LTTE supporters would exploit the process. He said the government did a lot to control wide-scale abuses, such as those, he implied, that had occurred in the past. Mass rape and village massacres did not occur during the GSL’s campaign, and he pointed again to the positive overall experience in the Eastern Province. In that case, said Blake, the GSL had nothing to fear from a national dialogue and reconciliation. Rajapaksa said the government is committed to winning hearts and minds, but it has only been three months since the end of fighting.” the US State Department further wrote.
    A classified diplomatic cable which details a meeting the US Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert Blake has had with  Secretary to the Ministry of Difence Gotabhaya Rajapaksa on September 24, 2009 in US. The Colombo Telegraph found the related US diplomatic cable from the Secretary of State section of the WikiLeaks database. The cable was classified as “Confidential” signed by Hillary Clinton on September 25 2009.
    Related stories to this cable;
    Floods affect 17,000, displace 1,500
    October 30, 2012

    by Dasun Edirisinghe

    As inter monsoon rains lashed all parts of the country, floods affected more than 17,000 civilians while displacing 1,500 people in eight Districts, the Disaster Management Centre (DMC) said.

    DMC Assistant Director Sarath Lal Kumara told The Island that 1,500, 48, 27, 19, 274, 48, 1,945 and 15,000 people were affected by floods in the Mullaitivu, Nuwara Eliya, Kegalle, Kurunegala, Kandy, Colombo, Trincomalee and Gampaha Districts respectively.

    He said that 13 houses were completely damaged and 29 other suffered minor damages due to floods.

    "Fortunately, no deaths have been reported so far, but 15 people have been reported missing in the Kinniya Divisional Secretariat area of the Trincomalee District," Kumara said.

    The deputy director said that worst affected Districts were Trincomalee and Mullaitivu.

    The Meteorology Department said that the cyclonic storm, ‘Nilam’ still persisted to the east of Sri Lanka.

    Meteorologist – in – charge D. A. Jayasinghaarachchi said that heavy rain and strong winds would continue in the North-Central, Northern, Eastern and North-Western provinces for few more days.

    "Other areas of the country would also receive rain with some places experiencing heavy downpours," he said.

    Jayasinghaarachchi said that the seas, off the coast, extending from Mannar to Trincomalee via Jaffna and Mullattivu would experience strong winds, very rough conditions and intermittent rain.

    Therefore, the fishing and naval community have been further advised to refrain from maritime activities in those seas, he said.

    Meanwhile, National Building Research Organisation (NBRO) issued a landslide alert countrywide.

    Head of the Landslide Research Division of the NBRO R. M. S. Bandara said that there were no major incidents reported, but people must be vigilant due to continuous rains.

    He said that the Hatton – Nuwara Eliya road and Kande Handiya – Ragala road, in the Nuwara Eliya District, were inundated yesterday due to earth-slips.

    Bandara said however, that it was not a disaster but mounds of earth had fallen onto the road due to road construction.

    Meanwhile, the JVP urged the government to provide relief to the affected people in the North, especially in resettled areas.

    JVP MP Sunil Handunnetti said that people in Pudukudiyirippu, Wellamullaivaikkal, Kopay and Mullaitivu had been displaced due to floods.

    "The government resettled them in temporary shelters recently," he said adding now their temporary shelters had bbeen washed away by the flood water.

    Naval sources said that the predicted cyclone moved away to Andra Pradesh in India, but heavy rains would occur for two more days.

    He said that despite the almost non – stop rain there were no major incidents except tanks and lakes overflowing.

    Tuesday, October 30, 2012

    Parliament​arian Sridharan visits flood victims in Mullaitivu
    [ Tuesday, 30 October 2012, 04:33.33 PM GMT +05:30 ]
    Thousands of people residing in the low lands of Mullaitivu district vastly affected from the flood water and displaced from their residence. These people were currently residing in the schools and churches in the area, sources said.
    People from the Iranaipaalai,Mulliwaikaal, Puthumathalan, Ambalawanpokkanai,Anandapuram,Thirumurikandi, Hindupuram,Kopaipulawu, Kokkilai and Karunatukeni areas in Mullitivu districts were effected from flood waters.
    Roads in these areas were submerged with flood water. Tamil National Alliance parliamentarian Sivananam Sridharan, Wligamam North Pradesgiyasabaha deputy chairman S.Jeevan, Kokuvil Kalwari center pastor V.Kanagaraja directly visited to the flooed affected area and also distributed packets of milk powder and biscuits for flood victims.
    Rough sea condition reports in the Mullaitivu area. Military personals continuously cause disturbances for flood victims and also relevant officials fails to provide bottles of drinking water and cooked foods for these victims.





    Diaspora engagement with young Sri Lanka MP’S

    by Victor Cherubim

    Sri Lanka Guardian
    ( October 30, 2012, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) A follow up current visit by an interparty, young parliamentarian (under 40) delegation from Sri Lanka from Government (SLFP), Opposition (UNP) and a representative from TNA was facilitated by the Royal Commonwealth Society, International Alert and One Text Initiative, after their earlier exploratory visit to UK in December 2011. The findings of their first visit formed the basis of a Joint report recently circulated to their fellow M.P’s and the Government on the UK Tamil diaspora interest in Sri Lanka. Though the MP’s feel it is a slow process, the dialogue has commenced.
    "Although years have gone and the dead cannot be brought back, if some recommendations aimed at securing greater confidence building among the diaspora are considered, it will be a way forward"
    The meeting was organised by Tamil Information Centre, London as previous. The delegation met a cross section of the diaspora in Kingston, a suburb of London on 27 October 2012. There were more women than men at the meeting, reflecting a widespread concern for women victims of war and unresolved issues back home. It was an organised, on-confrontation gathering without official hard-line diaspora organisation representation. Tamil organisations, such as GTF, BTF, Transnational Government in exile and others were conspicuous by their absence. It was anybody’s guess whether they were invited or wanted to participate or have been marginalised.   

    Read More »
    Lawyers urge the Government to cease attack on Judiciary: urge public to standby Chief Justice and the Judicial Service Commission (JSC)

    (Lanka-e-News -30.Oct.2012, 11.00PM) The Lawyers’ for Democracy are concerned about the ongoing unprecedented mudslinging campaign and all forms of attacks against the Judiciary. This has far reaching and repercussions on the rule of law. 

    We are shocked to hear of the contents of the parliamentary debate where there were baseless attacks on the JSC and we are further disturbed at the fact that the parliament has been mislead on the appointment of the Secretary of the JSC. 

    There is a general apprehension that an impeachment motion is being contemplated targeting the Chief Justice with a view to intimidating her on her judicial pronouncements. 
    We consider it as an attack on the independence of the Judiciary and on the Rule of Law. Having regard to the importance of the independence of the Judiciary we unreservedly call upon the government to cease this onslaught on the Judiciary. 

    We further express our fullest confidence in the Chief Justice and the JSC and the Judiciary in general. We hope that the public will stand by the Judiciary at this hour of need. We urge that all public conscience citizens to come forward to protect the last bastion of Democracy and Justice.
    Sri Lankan says there never an ethnic conflict
    Global TimesBy Agencies-2012-10-28 
    The Sri Lankan government Sunday said there was never an ethnic conflict in the country but only a war against terrorism.

    Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said that all ethnic groups on the island are coexisting peacefully although historically the minority Tamil community did face some issues.

    He said that the Tamil Tiger rebels, who claimed to have fought for the rights of the Tamils, had no interest in peace but instead exploited the respite given through peace talks and ceasefires to kill its opponents and strengthen its offensive capabilities.

    "Although it claimed to be fighting for the rights of the Tamil community by trying to establish a separate state, its sole interest was in increasing its stronghold over the territories it dominated in order to establish its own freedom," the Defence Ministry quoted Rajapaksa as saying.

    Rajapaksa said that ethnicity, language, religion, caste and gender have no bearing on people's opportunities in Sri Lanka.

    "This is amply borne out by the statistics. If we look at the universities, it is evident that students from all communities pursue studies in a variety of fields. There is no discrimination with regard to the services provided by the state, nor are there any serious tensions amongst the communities living in the country, " he said.

    He added that every opportunity has been given to the rehabilitated and reintegrated ex-rebel cadres to resume normal lives in society.

    Many programs have been launched, including those to support them to set up their own businesses, obtain funds for self- employment and undertake farming and fisheries related activities.
    One every five days: Ruki Fernando on disappearances in Sri Lanka
    UNA-UKUNA-UK New World Magazine

    25 October 2012
    At 2.31pm on 21 August 2012, a 32-year-old woman sent a text message to her relatives saying she had been taken to the Criminal Investigation Department in Vavuniya in the north of Sri Lanka. No one has heard from her since.
    Businessman Ramasamy Prabakaran filed a claim against the authorities after he was detained, tortured and subsequently found innocent in court. Two days before the hearing this February, he was abducted by armed men in Colombo, the capital.
    Lalith Weeraraj and Kugan Muruganantham, activists who supported families of Sri Lanka’s disappeared, became victims themselves on 9 December 2011, on the eve of the commemoration of Human Rights Day. Over 1,000 people protested against their abduction.Prageeth Ekneligoda, a journalist and cartoonist critical of the present government, has not been seen since 24 January 2010. He disappeared two days before the Sri Lankan presidential election.
    Dozens of people, including Catholic priest Francis Joseph, witnessed Sinnathurai Sasitharan, a prominent leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, surrender to the army during the final stages of the civil war in 2009. All of them are now missing. For decades, Sri Lankans of all stripes have suffered enforced disappearances. In the 1970s and 1980s, tens of thousands of young people from the majority Sinhalese community were disappeared. Since then, most victims have been minorities, with Tamils constituting the main target.
    During the last months of the war and its immediate aftermath, thousands of Tamils are thought to have disappeared, some, according to eyewitnesses, after surrendering to, or being arrested by, the armed forces. The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), which was set up by the Sri Lankan government in 2010, received information about 3,596 disappearance complaints. It concluded that a further, specialised investigation into disappearances was needed. The end of the war has not brought an end to these abuses. Based on reported cases (including attempted abductions), someone is disappeared every five days in Sri Lanka. Over 50 people have been taken from their loved ones in the first six months of this year.
    The rationale behind these attacks – both during the conflict and now – appears to be silencing dissent, whether this dissent comes from armed groups, journalists, aid workers, human rights defenders, members of the clergy or anyone else. The UN Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances has submitted 12,460 cases to Sri Lanka, of which 5,671 remain outstanding. Only Iraq has a worse record.
    Together with friends and colleagues, I have accompanied those left behind – mostly wives and mothers – in the search for their loved ones and for the truth, documenting their stories, and supporting their complaints to local bodies. We witnessed the callous treatment they received from the police and Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, and the general unwillingness to search for the disappeared or to hold perpetrators accountable. “You wouldn’t talk like that if it was your daughter,” one mother said to the LLRC last November.
    In November 2011, the head of the Sri Lankan delegation to the UN Committee Against Torture declared confidently that the disappeared journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda was living overseas. Upon returning to Sri Lanka, he admitted in court that he was not actually aware of Ekneligoda’s whereabouts. Earlier this year, when specific information about the location of two disappeared activists was provided to the national Human Rights Commission, it refused to undertake an immediate investigation, despite a clear mandate to do so.
    Even worse, some of the families of those missing have been intimidated and ridiculed. So too have many people who have supported them in their quest for truth and justice, including human rights defenders, journalists, politicians, religious leaders and lawyers. Many have been labelled “traitors” or “terrorist sympathisers”. Commemorations and campaigns for those who have disappeared have been banned, disrupted and restricted. Organisers and participants have been threatened and harassed.
    The failure of domestic mechanisms to act has compelled many families to seek international assistance for their loved ones. While the support and concern from human rights groups has been welcomed, many are frustrated that the international community has not been able to provide tangible help. There is also disappointment at the unwillingness to put real pressure on those involved. For me, the main glimmer of hope was the courage of the families of the disappeared, who refuse to accept defeat. However powerless I felt, I am honoured to have been part of their struggle.
    It is now three and a half years since the end of Sri Lanka’s long-running civil war. But until the families of the disappeared receive the support and compassion they deserve from the government and society at large, until their quest for truth, justice and accountability is over, until democracy and the rule of law are restored, a sustainable peace will remain elusive.
    In line with the provisions of the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, families should receive financial and legal support; access to counselling; prompt assistance with the issuing of relevant documentation, including death certificates; and full cooperation by national authorities to investigate cases. They should be free to hold memorials and to protest peacefully if adequate action is not taken. Reform of legal and other institutions, notably the Human Rights Commission, is also needed.
    At the international level, pressure should be put on the Sri Lankan government to ratify the Convention and to allow the UN Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances to visit the country. The Group has had an invitation pending for six years. This could help shed light on the fate of the disappeared and would also serve as a sign of political commitment by the government to address and prevent enforced disappearance. The engagement of countries in Central and South America that have experienced and found ways of dealing with mass disappearances is also crucial.
    But what is needed above all is for all Sri Lankans to wholeheartedly join the families of the disappeared in their search for truth, justice and accountability.
    Ruki Fernando is a Sri Lankan human rights activist who has worked closely with families of the country’s disappeared on documentation, local campaigns and international advocacy.

    TNA just making noise - Gota
    28 October 2012

    Gotabhaya Rajapakse has spoken to Uthayan, during his trip to India, regarding his stance on the 13th Amendment, and questions of demilitarisation in the North.
    Extracts translated below:
    GR: Absolutely. My opinion on the 13th Amendment is firm. The Amendment was only introduced to solve Prabhakaran’s problem. But even Prabhakaran rejected it. Then the TNA had nothing to say, and it’s amusing that they are now raising their voices and crying out for the 13th Amendment.
    Uthayan: Are you saying in that case, that the 13th Amendment will not resolve any problems?
    GR: Absolutely. It may help with some administrative problems, but this amendment will never provide any realistic, practical solutions.
    Uthayan: The TNA pointed out to India that the number of soldiers in the North and East need to be reduced and that military camps in the region need to be abolished. Did you receive any pressure from India concerning this during your trip?
    GR: I received no such pressure from India, and there is no need for India to give it. The TNA are creating problems. Whether it is in the North or the South of the country, army camps are essential for national security. When it comes to security, there is no distinction between North, East, South or West.
    Some of India’s key military bases are located in Tamil Nadu. Has anyone ever said that they need to be abolished in Tamil Nadu? The TNA are being worse than the Tigers. We will not compromise the defence of our country in order to bend to pressure from anyone.
    The TNA is creating an outcry about the 13th Amendment. But does the 13th Amendment say anything about abolishing army camps in the North and East? The TNA needs to dissolve its act and come forward in a straightforward manner.