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

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Sri Lanka's satellite control station to be opened in Pallekele in June 2013

Sat, Nov 17, 2012, 10:41 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Lankapage LogoNov 17, Colombo: The controlling unit or the Content Management Station of the Sri Lanka's first communication satellite which is now under construction will start operations in June 2013, President Mahinda Rajapaksa's youngest son Rohitha Rajapaksa has told local media.
Sri Lanka's first satellite will take to orbit on November 22 from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in China and it will be positioned over Sri Lanka. The satellite will be operational for commercial purposes in the region by early June 2013.
The control unit for the satellite is now being constructed in Pallekele near Kandy in the Central Province.

The youngest Rajapaksa has said that the logistics for the space station is being acquired now.
The station will employ 200 professionals including 25 chief engineers. China is building up technical expertise in them at present.
In an interview with a local newspaper Rohitha Rajapaksa has said that Sri Lanka has planned to launch its own satellite in 2015.
SupremeSAT (Pvt) Ltd., a BOI approved company runs this project at a total investment US$ 360 million including the space station and space academy.
Sri Lanka will be the 45th country in the world to own a communication satellite and the third in South Asia. India and Pakistan have their own satellites.
SupremeSAT has entered into an exclusive partnership agreement with China's State-owned China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC) for the design, manufacturing and launching of the satellite.

POLICE TRAINING SCHOOL OIC SHOT DEAD

Police Training School OIC shot dead
November 18, 2012
OIC of the Ratnapura Police Training School, Chief Inspector Indrasoma Ratnayake was shot and killed this morning.

Police said the shooting had occurred at around 9.30am today while the police officer was traveling to a land owned by him in Elapatha, Ratnapura.

The body of the 57-year-old victim has currently been placed at the Ratnapura Hospital. 

A land dispute is suspected to have led to the murder while the perpetrator has not been identified yet. 

Politics Has Hijacked Our Vocabulary

Colombo Telegraph
By MA Sumanthiran -November 18, 2012
M. A. Sumanthiran MP
Why does a dark cloud of derision continue to linger in Sri Lanka with no signs of dissipating?
The problem lies with our perceptions. Our political reality is mirror of how we as citizens view our neighbours, our government and ourselves. The political notion of ‘unity’ is hollow if we fail in the simple task of seeing each other as equals. The notions of ‘representation’ and ‘accountability’ are vacant if we come to view government as the source and not the steward of power. It is in these simple tasks that we as Sri Lankans have most tragically failed. Instead of defining our politics, we have become a society defined by politics.
Politics has hijacked our vocabulary. It tells us that the collapse of state power is the dictionary definition of “power-sharing.” Politics tells us that “de-evolution” is a four letter word and inimical to nation building. In similar fashion, much of the language that dominates national discourse has become politicized to the point of distorting intended meaning. The tragedy is that in many cases, these distorted words were our first words.
Modern Sri Lanka defines ‘sovereignty’ as a matter of State autonomy. In that context, it is no wonder that calls for Federalism and de-evolution of the power of the State is viewed as a threat to the same. But a true description of sovereignty is found in our Constitution, Article 3: “In the Republic of Sri Lanka, sovereignty is in the people and is inalienable. Sovereignty includes the powers of government, fundamental rights and the franchise.” Sovereignty, properly understood, lies with the people of Sri Lanka; the government is only a steward of that sovereignty. It is for this reason the Constitution assigns to the people all legislative, executive and judicial powers, which are to be exercised out of logistical necessity by government instruments. The Parliament, the Presidency and the Courts are properly seen as tools of the people.
There is no escaping the fact that the people of Sri Lanka have differences. These differences naturally manifest in our representative tools of government. It is the task of government to represent and consider these differences with the aim of arriving at equitable accommodation of all constituent interests. This process is predicated on the understanding that cooperation creates mutual benefit in much the same way that trade creates wealth. However, if the differences of the people are poorly managed or represented by government, then the mirror of politics – whose task is to reflect constituent values – becomes instead a magnifying glass serving only to amplify and potentially ignite divisiveness. For this reason, it is important that the people of Sri Lanka accept their differences but clearly and publically put aside their prejudices – especially when it comes to political vocabulary. That is the standard that the people must hold themselves and their government accountable.
Peace is possible, but it has to start with the citizen. Sri Lanka must get back to her first words. When you poke through the ashes of civil conflict you will commonly find embers of skepticism and mistrust. The approach of the Sri Lankan Government has been to sweep that smoldering ash under the carpet where they hope it will be smothered. Instead their efforts have created friction and stirred discontent. If we are to realize a strong society we cannot run from the past. We must acknowledge the past and be reborn from it together.
Sri Lanka had no unifying War or Conflict to conceive a national identity. Post-colonialism, Sri Lanka inherited a system that was neither uniquely suited nor organically grown to meet the needs of a bifurcated society. The insufficient accommodation of distinct political entities was inimical to fostering a national identity. Instead of forging a singular vision, the Island reverted to segregate imaginations. Now some sixty years later, we still have not learnt our lesson. Any viable long-term solution to Sri Lankan politics must seek to create a national identity not by imposing a uniform whole, but by acknowledging and empowering the diverse parts. The imposition of one identity over another will always be perceived and opposed as subjugation. In contrast, acknowledging the parts creates a demand for participation in a common system. This participation alone can foster a sense of national identity. This process is not the enemy of a united Sri Lanka. It is the only viable means of attaining a united Sri Lanka.
In this context, it is clear to see that the efforts of measures like the 13th Amendment to accomplish the goals of devolution are wholly inadequate. The 13th Amendment does not devolve Executive power to the people or even to their elected regional representatives. Instead Executive power is ‘devolved’ to the person of the Governor who is appointed and maintained by Executive. The devolution of legislative power is stymied by its subjection to the approval of this unelected official. The ability to make statutes is likewise limited by the profound caveat that the Central Parliament has overlapping and superseding jurisdiction. This is not the sort of acknowledgement and empowerment that demands participation of the parts in the whole. The scant measures of the 13th Amendment do not return power to the people and will not beget national identity. Sri Lanka needs a homegrown solution that reflects the political reality that “all persons are equal before the law and are entitled to the equal protection of the law (Article 12).”
Prior to the failure of the Sri Lankan State is a failure of the Sri Lankan Peoples across every tongue and creed. We have forgotten our first words. We have come to accept as immutable reality the centrifugal nature of State power which seeks to compound and consolidate. Sri Lanka has further accepted the subsequent whirlwind of infringement that has disturbed every sector from the Economy to Education.
We have come to accept measures like the 13th Amendment as “the best the Government can do.” But it is not the best the government can do because it is not the best Sri Lankans can do. The Peoples of Sri Lanka must exercise their power to reclaim the language of ‘equality’, ‘representation’ and ‘popular sovereignty’. If the dark cloud on Sri Lankan politics is to be lifted, Sri Lankans must be reborn from their shared history and reclaim their first words.
65000 in the North-East mentally affected by war

Tamil Guardian 17 November 2012

Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Health has officially announced that around 65000 people in the North-East have been affected by some form of mental trauma or illness as a consequence of the three-decade long war.
The Deputy Health Minister told Parliament that in that tally almost 63000 have received treatment and over 2000 are currently undergoing treatment.
The shock announcement came in response to questions from TNA MP A. Vinayagamoorthy regarding mental illness statistics in the war affected North-East.



போரால் வடக்கில் 65,000 பேருக்கு மனநலம் பாதிப்பு; சுகாதார அமைச்சு அதிர்ச்சித் தகவல்
news
logonbanner-1வடக்கு கிழக்கில் 30 வருடங்களாகத் தொடர்ந்த போர் காரணமாக 65 ஆயிரம் பேர் மனநலம் பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளனர் என்கிற அதிர்ச்சித் தகவலை சுகாதார அமைச்சு உத்தியோகபூர்வமாக வெளியிட்டுள்ளது.
இவர்களுள் 62 ஆயிரத்து 674 பேர் ஏற்கெனவே சிகிச்சை பெற்றுள்ளனர், 2 ஆயிரத்து 556 பேர் சிகிச்சை பெற்றுவருகின்றனர் என்று பிரதி சுகாதார அமைச்சர் லலித் திஸாநாயக்க நேற்று நாடாளுமன்றத்தில் தெரிவித்தார். 
வாய்மூல விடைக்கான கேள்வி நேரத்தின்போது பிரதி அமைச்சர் இந்தத் தகவலைத் தெரிவித்தார். யாழ். மாவட்ட தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பு நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் அ.விநாயகமூர்த்தி எழுப்பிய கேள்விக்கு அவர் பதிலளித்தார்.
போர் நடவடிக்கைகளின்போது வட மாகாணத்தில் மனநலம் பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள் எத்தனை பேர்? இவர்களுக்கு எங்கே சிகிச்சை அளிக்கப்படுகின்றது? இவர்களையும் விசேட தேவையுடையவர்களாகக் கருதி நிவாரணங்களை வழங்க அரசு நடவடிக்கை எடுக்குமா என விநாயகமூர்த்தி கேள்வி எழுப்பினார். 
"யாழ். போதனா வைத்தியசாலையில் 1,271 பேரும், மன்னார் வைத்தியசாலையில் 407 பேரும், வவுனியாவில் 878 பேரும் உள்நோயாளர்களாக சிகிச்சை பெற்றுவருகின்றனர். 
""ஏற்கனவே, யாழ். போதனா வைத்தியசாலையில் 25 ஆயிரத்து 976 பேரும், ஏனைய பிரதேச வைத்தியசாலைகளில் 18 ஆயிரத்து 361 பேரும், மன்னாரில் 4 ஆயிரத்து 981 பேரும், வவுனியாவில் 9 ஆயிரத்து 355 பேரும், கிளிநொச்சியில் 2 ஆயிரத்து 514 பேரும், முல்லைத்தீவில் ஆயிரத்து 287 பேரும் என 62 ஆயிரத்து 474 பேர் சிகிச்சை பெற்றுள்ளனர்.
இவர்களுக்கு அரச மற்றும் தனியார் தொண்டு நிறுவனங்களில் புனர்வாழ்வு அளிக்கப்பட்டுவருகின்றது'' என்றார்.

Jaffna’s female trishaw drivers bridge the gap

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The programme initiated by the Women Education and Research Centre (WERC) to introduce female three-wheeler drivers in the North, is a success, says Jaffna Divisional Secretariat’s Female Development Officer Uthayani Navratnam.
Since its inception in February this year, female drivers are seen in Jaffna, with the municipality allocating a three-wheeler stand for them in Jaffna.�“Old women and children in particular hire female three-wheeler drivers, because they feel safe when travelling with female drivers,” says Uthayani.

On the road with her little passengers
Through this programme, trishaws were provided to females of households whose breadwinner was dead or disabled. There are over 40,000 widows in the Northern Province, of whom, more than 26,000 reside in Jaffna district alone. There are over 42,000 war widows in the Eastern Province.
Some of these widows are given a monthly Samurdhi allowance of Rs. 350, which is insufficient to lessen the hardships these women go through.�Rameswaran Indrawathani (45), a mother of two, has driven a three-wheeler for eight months. “When my husband lost his right leg in a shell explosion in Athalan, we were helpless. We couldn’t find enough money for our children’s education and other expenditure. Now, as a trishaw driver, I earn Rs 500 daily, which makes things easy for us,” she said. She now gets hires over the phone she told the Sunday Times.
At its inception, three-wheelers were given to 20 women in Jaffna, 5 in Nallur and 3 in Uduvil, said Uthayani Navaratnam. “These women, despite being badly affected by war, had a desire to earn their living to overcome their hardships, which this programme has done,” she added.

Breaking barriers: The drivers wait for hires
WERC grants half the cost of the vehicle, while the balance is to be paid in monthly installments of Rs 10,000. As this liability and their daily expenses are very difficult for the women to bear, the organisation bears the total cost, and recovers the money over a period of time.
Also, male three-wheeler drivers lend a willing helping hand in case of an emergency or urgent repairs, the Sunday Times learnt.
However, while this has brought colour to their lives, some of the female three-wheeler drivers complain that motorcyclists make it hard for them to do their job.

Never Again Says The UN, Yet Again
Colombo TelegraphBy Suren Surendiran -November 18, 2012 
Suren Surendiran
I wrote in the UK Guardian on 30 May 2009, eleven days after the tragic end of the war titled ‘The ÚN has failed the Tamils’  where I referred to and identified many of the failings and weaknesses now being acknowledged after an internal inquiry within the UN, three and half years later. If I had known all of these then and during the war, it begs the question why an international body which was formed fundamentally to protect humanity didn’t know or did it know and failed to act?
This is not the first time the UN had failed in such catastrophic proportions. Even in my piece back in 2009, I stated that UN inaction in Rwanda, Bosnia, Gaza and Darfur has led to many thousands of innocent lives being lost and many more displaced. Yet lessons were not learnt. If after so many repeated failings, this institution hasn’t learnt its lessons, what gives us any confidence that it will learn any lessons after this report?
“Never again” said the UN after acknowledging its own failings in the Rwandan genocide in 1994. Fifteen years later and after many more failings which cost more innocent lives, in Sri Lanka, the UN repeated the same errors of inaction and failings at the highest levels of authority.
It is acknowledged in the UN Panel of experts’ report that over forty thousand innocent civilians could have been killed. However other credible estimates place a much larger number of deaths ranging from 75,000 to 146,000. The latter being the estimate by a distinguished local Bishop who lived through the war.
The UN Secretary General reacted late, nevertheless reacted in setting up a panel of experts to advise him on accountability and what measures he could take to address accountability for what happened during the final stages of the war. The experts came up with their findings and made a set of recommendations. The Secretary General left that report to hold dust since it was published on 31 March 2011 to date. I am sure he blames the lack of political will on part of the member states, particularly the powerful five Security Council members.
A local Tamil politician was quoted as saying that “We all know that the international law is only on paper but, in practice it is international politics.”
Beyond the UN, some of the other human rights and humanitarian institutions must also take responsibility as they could have been more vociferous than they were as they all knew what was happening at that time was nearer a genocide.
Ambassadors and High Commissioners of countries who claim to uphold the highest values of human rights, who failed to address and inform their respective country foreign ministries the real story must feel ashamed and will have to live the rest of their lives with guilt.
Even today, President Rajapaksa and his brothers who were all implicated as alleged war criminals in the UN Panel of Expert’s report carry on with their criminality with impunity. After three and a half years after the end of the war, there is no political solution for the Tamil National Question, instead even the Indian sponsored 13thamendment to the constitution, which was never accepted by the Tamils has been put under threat by an executive president and his war mongering brothers. The constitutional protections that maintained independence of certain key institutions such as the Election Commission, the Supreme Court appointments, the Police Commission, the Human Rights Commission, Appointment of Election Commissioner etc. have all been removed by the introduction of the eighteenth amendment to the constitution. Disappearances are on the rise to historic proportions. Threats to the lives of journalists who dare to challenge the regime are on the increase. Chief Justice has been threatened with a process of impeachment as a direct result of her challenge to stop unconstitutional actions of the regime.
Believe it or not this is the same Sri Lanka that has been promoted as a dream destination by many firms including the Lonely Planet, the British Airways etc.
It is beyond belief that even Her Majesty the Queen may be considering attending the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) which is due to take place in Sri Lanka during the fourth quarter of 2013. One would hope the Buckingham Palace would have learnt its lessons after the debacle of Her Majesty who hosted the late dictator of Romania Nicolae and Elena Ceausescu in 1978 who were executed by their own people for their crimes against humanity in 1989.
We certainly hope common sense will prevail and learning from history, Her Majesty will avoid giving yet another alleged war criminal undue publicity which will help him to remain in power.
Suren Surendiran who is the spokesperson for the Tamil Diaspora organisation Global Tamil Forum (GTF)

"Don’t talk of Mafias,’’says SEC chief


 
The new chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission believes that the use of the words "Stock Market Mafia" to be a deterrent to foreigners coming into the Colombo market and at a news briefing last week suggested that the media should stop using that expression.

Journalists present at the briefing by the SEC and the CSE pointed out that this description was first used by former SEC Chairman Tilak Karunaratne who indicated that he was quitting his position due to unacceptable pressure that had been applied to the detriment of properly fulfilling his regulatory obligations.

The `Mafia’ reference was made in relation to what was perceived to be a small group of politically influential market participants who `cornered’ illiquid stocks and engaged in pump and dump strategies that had hurt the market and small players badly.

Godahewa insisted that no such organized group existed and assured that the regulatory functions would be properly conducted with investigations that were ongoing at the time he took office continuing.

Asked whether the practice of compounding market offences detected on payment of penalties would continue, he said that there has been no decision to discontinue compounding if such action was warranted.

There had been instances when market players accused of manipulation paying penalties usually amounting to what was calculated to be illegitimate gains to compound the offence and not face prosecution. Such compounding was done with no admission of guilt.

The SEC said that its role as the capital market regulator had increased significantly with vibrant market activity that followed the end of the war.

"In today’s interconnected capital markets, regulators have an increasingly challenging role balancing the needs to create efficient markets by preventing systemic risk and developing the market. Efficient securities market regulation and development are critical to the development of an economy," the Commission explained.

It said it was working with all important stakeholders in the market such as the government, CSE/CDS, listed companies, stockbrokers, unit trusts, margin providers, investments mangers, credit trading agencies, underwriters, investors, media and the banks to achieve its main objectives.

Godahewa said that they have been talking to the various stakeholders in the last two or three months and almost 90% of the suggestions that have been made have been implemented while implementation of the rest was in the pipeline.

Although there are less than 50,000 active accounts in the Central Depository Systems (CDS), not even one percent of Sri Lanka’s population participated in the stock market which in the last 28 years gave remarkable returns to investors.

The SEC has computed that since 1985 the average market return per year was 25.5% against a Treasury Bill return of an annual average of 14.4%. Since the year 2000, the stock market has given an annual average return of 32.8% against the 12% return on Treasury Bills.

The average return on the stock market since 2009 has been 53.1% whereas Treasury Bills had given a return of 12.5%.

"These statistics prove that investing in the stock market is a profitable long term investment though there can be fluctuations in the short term," the SEC said.

Godahewa suggested that new players in the stock market begin by investing through unit trusts whose funds are managed by professionals while familiarizing themselves with the market and its intricacies. He strongly advised that they should not follow speculators and come to grief.

It was revealed at the press conference that three cases relating to the stock market were before courts and papers relating to the NSB-The Finance deals have been referred to the Attorney-General.

The NSB side of the deal was not within the purview of the SEC as it was not a listed company.

De-Escalate Impeachment Crisis

By Jehan Perera -November 18, 2012
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThe process of impeaching Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake has commenced in earnest. The Parliamentary Select Committee to investigate and pass judgment on her has been appointed with a 7-4 government majority and consists of very senior government and opposition members.  It has been very prompt in serving the charges against her.  The Chief Justice was given one week to answer the 14 charges which she appealed against.  According to news reports, this appeal filed by her lawyers was denied, and she was asked to appear in person and request for more time.  Usually government administrative procedures offer those who are charged and have to answer the charges a period of 6 weeks.  But this is not an ordinary case, and so the wheels of justice are moving extraordinarily fast.
Sri Lanka has a government that has shown it can dispose of obstacles to its path without delay.  Once the government has decided on a course of action there is little or nothing that it will permit to stand in its way.  Whether it was the elimination of the LTTE or the cleaning up of Colombo to be one of the most livable cities in Asia, the government has not permitted opposition to stand in its way.  In eliminating the LTTE the government chose to ignore those sections of the international community who urged a negotiated settlement.   The plight of slum dwellers has not stopped the government’s beautification of Colombo.
The improvements taking place in Sri Lanka compare favourably with other post-war countries such as Nepal or the Philippines.  But now an albatross hangs around its neck in the form of international allegations of war crimes that are not going away.  In an interdependent and interconnected world, every action has its reaction, and these cannot be confined to national boundaries. The recently published internal report of the UN on the end phase of the country’s war will add to the international demands for further investigations into what actually happened in Sri Lanka’s war.
On the other hand, this quality of doing what has to be done, or what is deemed to have to be done, has earned the government much praise within the country.  It was not that the government leadership was unaware of the possible consequences of defying the international community in its bid to end the terror of the LTTE.  The government has experts in all forms of law, including international law and local and international relations.  The government would have consulted them prior to deciding to eliminate the LTTE and its leadership at high human cost and dare the consequences.  The fact that the government was able to take this decision has served it well in subsequent elections, particularly going by the electoral verdicts in most parts of the country.
Mounting Opposition                           Read More

Why devolution of power should be on linguistic basis

18 Nov, 2012 -Image courtesy Sify
Sinhala nationalists who deny that the Tamils have any grievances are now campaigning for the abolition of the Provincial Councils under the 13th Amendment. But S.W.R.D the western educated liberal who introduced the Sinhala Only Law realized that an injustice was done to the Tamil people for it was not only an instrument to discriminate against Tamils in State employment but also to force them to deal with the State and its agencies only in Sinhala which the large majority of Tamil people did not know. How could the Tamil people give voice to their problems to the powers that be unless they learn Sinhala for, given the Sinhala as the only medium of education, future political leaders would know only Sinhala. ? Even then the Tamil people suspected rightly that the Sinhalese wanted to exercise power only for their benefit and since most Sinhala leaders believed in a zero sum game in the economic sphere thought it was necessary to reduce the number of Tamils in State employment. These extremists later realized that the Tamils were entering the high paying professions like the Medical and Engineering and Accounting professions in numbers disproportionate to their numbers in the population. So they introduced media-wise standardization for entry to the Universities. This was the last straw as far as the Tamil youth were concerned and they took to arms to establish their own State where they could manage their resources to serve their objectives of higher education.
Were the Tamil people left with any choice when the motive of discrimination was so patent? So education and higher education would have to be a devolved power. The Tamil people have a human right to deal with the Police in their own language. But Sinhala was the official language which means the language of record n all government offices of the central government. It is not possible to have two official languages in every government office throughout the length and breadth of the country. Nor is it neither necessary nor economically feasible for it would mean enormous extra cost. The British colonial ruler had only English as the official language for their centralized administration through provincial chiefs drawn from the bureaucracy who were free to act with independence and according to bureaucratic values of good governance. But in 1956 a new political and governance culture was introduced by the SLFP. The local MP wanted to exercise power in the Executive sphere instead of confining themselves to the legislative sphere to which they were elected. They wanted to exercise power in appointments, transfers and discipline in the public service which are maters of internal administration. They wanted to influence the Police in their functions. The Tamil politicians were not in the ruling political party and could not exercise power in a similar manner. They were also better educated and understood that it was improper to engage in this new political culture. They probably knew that this new political culture would lead to the collapse of democratic public administration and would lead to a one party military state.
SWRD the liberal politician leader sought to rectify the injustice to the Tamil people because of the Sinhala only policy. He did the only practical thing which was to suggest devolving power to the Tamils through a Regional Council for the North and East where Tamil would be the official language and where Tamil politicians could exercise power through such Council. The British had only English as the official language which meant that all records in government offices were kept in English only although locals could speak to government officials in the local languages and were interpreted for the benefit of English officials, although these officials were required to learn the local languages to converse with and understand locals. Court proceedings were recorded in English only. SWRD probably realized that it was neither practical nor economically feasible to have two official languages in every government office throughout the length and breadth of the country. So he drew up the Bandaranaike- Chelvanayagam Pact in 1958. But Sinhala extremists protested and he was forced to tear up the Pact. Another liberal leader among the Sinhalese- Dudley Senanayake agreed to a similar proposal for devolution of power with Chelvanayagam but extremists forced him too to abandon the pact.
All tempts to get the Sinhalese public servants to learn Tamil by providing incentives have failed. Nor is necessary. Consider Switzerland where four languages are spoken- German. Italian French and Romansh. Three of them are of equal status in the Federal Government but in each Canton there is only one official language and it is the language of the majority. Canada has two official languages but they are not applicable throughout Canada. Here is what the Act of 1988 set in place.
that English and French will have equal status of languages of work within the federal public service within geographically defined parts of the country that are designated bilingual (most notably in National Capital Region, Montreal and New Brunswick), as well as in certain overseas government offices and in parts of the country where there is sufficient demand for services in both official languages. In remaining geographical areas, the language of work for federal public servants is French (in Quebec) and English (elsewhere);
These countries are federal and Switzerland is smaller than in Sri Lanka. The need to devolve is also necessary to reduce the cost and burden of having two official languages in the central government for day to day functions would be done in one language only – Sinhalese I the Sinhala majority areas and Tamil in the Tamil majority provinces. So it is necessary that there should be devolution of power on linguistic basis as India did and there have been no persistent secessionist movements in India and the movement in the South has died down.
Why? Because there are wider economic opportunities in a larger State than in a smaller state provide there is no discrimination against the minority in the larger state. The people also realize that economic development is not a zero sum unlike the Sinhalese who probably because of the insular mentality of an Island people cannot grasp this fact of economics.
Now there is a clamor to abolish Provincial Councils. Some want to reduce the Tamil majority by combining Sinhala majority and Tamil majority provinces. Others who rather naïve about local government want to establish a Grama Rajya or District Councils to which power should be devolved. But this requires another article.

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice

17/11/2012

A year from now, on the 16th of November 2013, Sri Lanka will host the 2013 Commonwealth Summit or CHOGM. Yet so poor is the human rights' situation in Sri Lanka that instead of the traditional year-out message of welcome the Commonwealth Secretariat had to issue a statement condemning Sri Lanka's impeachment of its Chief Justice.

The report comes as a powerful committee of the British House of Commons issued a report stating that the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, should not attend the summit if it does go ahead:
We conclude that continuing evidence of serious human rights abuses in Sri Lanka shows that the Commonwealth's decision to hold the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo was wrong. We are impressed by the clear and forthright stance taken by the Canadian Prime Minister, who has said he would attend the Meeting only if human rights were improved. The UK Prime Minister should publicly state his unwillingness to attend the meeting unless he receives convincing and independently-verified evidence of substantial and sustainable improvements in human and political rights in Sri Lanka.
We, and the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, have issued a joint letter to the Commonwealth Secretary General reiterating our previous call for attendance at the Commonwealth Summit to be conditional upon human rights improvements. To quote the statement:
The Canadian Prime Minister has already asserted that he would not attend the Commonwealth Summit in Sri Lanka till the human rights situation in the country improves. On 14th November 2012 a powerful committee of the UK Parliament recommended that the UK Prime Minister should not attend the Commonwealth Summit.  
Even as disquiet on the question of holding the Commonwealth Summit in Sri Lanka increases, the Commonwealth Secretariat has In fact pushed for full attendance.It is morally indefensible to continue to stand by and allow Sri Lanka to unconditionally host the association’s premier meeting and go on to Chair for the next two years. This would seriously undermine the Commonwealth’s values, which have only recently been re-affirmed in 2009 and are supposed to be enshrined into a Commonwealth Charter in 2013.  
We repeat our call to you, as the highest official of the Commonwealth, to uphold the Commonwealth’s commitments to its fundamental values and pursue a course of action that sees the establishment of a series of benchmarks which the Sri Lankan government needs to fulfill, in order to be fit for a Commonwealth Summit.
Heads of Commonwealth Governments should also heed this message.

Read the full statement here.

Need To Hit The Bottom Of The Precipice Before Climbing Back

By Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena -November 17, 2012
Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena
Colombo TelegraphIt did not take much prescience to foretell that parliamentary privilege would be formally wielded to prohibit public discussion of the PSC process with the commencement of the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) to consider the impeachment of the Chief Justice of Sri Lanka this week. The Speaker’s warning to party leaders on Friday that matters discussed at the PSC may not be divulged to the media is therefore unsurprising.
Bar on premature publication of proceedings of PSC
As observed previously, first we had a group of recently appointed (but unfortunately unnamed) President’s Counsel who tried to make out, quite wrongly, that fair and reasonable discussion of the impeachment even before the Select Committee had commenced sittings, amounted to a breach of privilege. Moreover, that the Chief Justice’s response to the charges relating to financial impropriety was also prohibited. As remarked in these column spaces, one can understand their natural eagerness to prostrate themselves before the Presidential hand that had magnanimously rewarded them. Yet this was a truly preposterous attempt to gag public discussion.
Now however that the PSC has commenced sittings, a bar applies to publication of proceedings in a committee of the House before they are reported to the House (see point 9. of Part B in the schedule to the privileges law, 1953). This is an offence that may be tried by Parliament itself.
Power to deal with offences in Part B. is conferred upon either the House or the Supreme Court. This is different to offences defined in Part A. which, as discussed last week, are exclusively within the power of the Supreme Court to punish. It is from this prohibition in Part B. that the Speaker’s warning to party leaders and the media this week emanated.
Public duty to discuss general issues of impeachment
Even so this bar applies strictly only to the premature publication of matters discussed before the PSC. It does not and cannot, even on the most favourable interpretation that the government may endeavour to give to its wording, encompass general criticism of the impeachment, its impact on the independence of the judiciary, the quality of justice meted out to the Chief Justice and relevant actions of the government in that regard.
The core question, as fittingly editorialised in this newspaper last week, remains as to whether this an impeachment or an inquisition of the Chief Justice? The public is entitled to discuss this question. It is this capacity which distinguishes Sri Lanka from a barbarian society, even though many may be of the opinion that we have crossed the line from civilised to barbarian some time ago. Efforts to suppress fair discussion of these matters must therefore be fiercely resisted.
Power of the mere threat of privilege
But there is little doubt that, quite apart from what the law actually prohibits, the mere threat of privilege with all the power that this gives to a House in which the ruling party pushing this impeachment of the country’s top judicial officer predominates in rude numbers, will inhibit vigorous discussion of the very impeachment process itself.
The potential that parliamentary privilege possesses to chill freedom of expression and information is certainly enormous. It is parallel to the similar ‘chilling’ effect that the power of contempt of court has in relation to questions touching on judicial behaviour.
In enlightened jurisdictions, the negative impact of both contempt and parliamentary privilege is limited by wise law reform, the sheer weight of liberal public opinion that raps governments as well as judges over the knuckles when authority becomes converted to authoritarianism not to mention powerful lobbies that jealously safeguard basic rights of information and expression. Even in South Asia itself countries such as India, Pakistan and Bangladesh have surged ahead with legal, regulatory and policy reforms. In contrast, we remain in the “Dark Ages’ as it were.
Thrusting of judges into the ‘thicket’ of political controversy
That said, esoteric questions of law anyway have little impact when the law itself has fundamentally lost its relevance in Sri Lanka. As this column has repeatedly stated, the responsibility for this crisis of the Rule of Law which was slow and gradual in the making, cannot be laid solely at the door of different administrations. As voters and citizens, we bear a far share of the blame.
But this is not the only point at which questions must be directed back to ourselves. It needs to be asked therefore as to what specific contribution has Sri Lanka’s judiciary made towards protecting and securing its own independence. This is not to claim that we should have had judges of the calibre of Ronald Dworkin’s satirical idealization of a judicial Hercules possessed of infinite judicial wisdom. Judges are human beings after all and subject to the same frailties that visit all of us. From independence, Sri Lankan judges have failed the people on some occasions. They have also arisen magnificently to the challenge at significant points in history. We have had the best and most conscientious of judges working miracles with an obdurate law or legal provision while respecting the judicial function. We have also had amoral and politicised judges rendering silent the most liberal law or constitutional provision.
Yet the unpleasant thrusting of judges into the ‘thicket’ of political controversy without respite, (ordinarily far removed as this is from the judicial role), became evident particularly from the early part of the previous decade, notwithstanding retired Chief Justice Sarath Silva’s most labored denials of the same to this column two weeks ago. This is the point at which the cherished theoretical notion of the independence of the judiciary itself came under ferocious and unprecedented public scrutiny to the extreme discomfiture of those in the legal and judicial spheres.
This focus continues to the extent that names of judges and their actions are now bandied about, (as irrepressibly well deserved as this may be in certain cases), in chat forums, websites and at public discussions. Surely only the most blinded among us will say that this is a good development for public respect for the institution of Sri Lanka’s judiciary? Certainly an honest discussion of the judicial role in Sri Lanka must occupy our minds if this country is to recover even decades down the line in regard to this most profound crisis of confidence in the law since independence.
Stepping back from this ruinous action
Now, external political excursions into the functioning of the judicial institution have culminated in the present sorry impeachment of an incumbent Chief Justice.
The government should even at this late stage step back from its ruinous actions for the sake of this country’s bemused people if not in order to avoid the ridicule that this exposes the country to, internationally.
That it would not listen to reason is however a near certainty. That Sri Lanka would need to hit the bottom of the precipice before climbing back towards slow recovery is also a near certainty. These are the unpalatable but unavoidable truths that confront us.

INSD calls for Democratisation, Devolution & Demilitarisation

Sunday, 18 November 2012 
We, the participants at the 2012 annual INSD conference from Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, United Kingdom, India and Sri Lanka, comprising Sinhalese, Tamils and others,
• Condemn all killings and human rights violations that has happened an continue to occur in Sri Lanka
• Commit ourselves to work closely and proactively with the civil society inside Sri Lanka as well as in other countries, especially in India
• Call on the Sri Lankan government to:
*Consider withdrawing the impeachment of the Lanka based on widespread concerns that this is politically motivated
*Immediate release all political prisoners who have not been charged after several months and years of detention, improvement of prison conditions and safety of the
*To make a formal public announcement of it's commitment not to abolish the 13 towards a lasting political solution in Sri Lanka which goes beyond the parameters of the 13
*Speedily implement the constructive recommendations of the Lessons Learnt & Reconciliation Commission, especially to demilitarize the North and East of Sri Lanka
* Initiate and agree to a credible independent inquiry into the allegations of violation of international rights laws in the last phase of the war in 2009
*Agreed by participants at the conference ”Between Quest for Peace and Peace keeping - steps to Justice and Reconciliation in Sri Lanka”, organized by INSD in corporation with GEKODEM 9th-11th November 2012.