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, November 20, 2012


Handicapped man killers arrested

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By Madura Ranwala-November 19, 2012,

 The Boralesgamuwa police early yesterday arrested four suspects over Sinday night’s killing of the mentally handicapped brother of a three wheeler driver at Divlapitiya Temple Road in Boralesgamuwa.

The suspects would be produced before the Gangodawila Magistrate today, police said.

Police spokesman SSP Prishantha Jayakody said that the suspects, residing in Boresgamuwa, were arrested with the knife they used to kill the victim, Delappuli Don Chanaka Amila. who had been sleeping at the time of the attack.

The 22-year-old victim had been living with his mother and brother. However, according to the police, the suspects, who were between 25 and 35, had targeted the victim’s brother, who is a trishaw driver, due to a dispute between them.

The killers had apparently mistaken the victim for his elder brother in the dark.

Police said the dispute was over a trishaw and it would be investigated further. One of the killers was a trishaw driver and the others were his friends.

WikiLeaks:The Rajapaksa Position In The Party Is Strengthened At The Bandaranaikes’ Expense

Colombo TelegraphBy Colombo Telegraph -November 20, 2012
“Nirupama Rajapakse, a cousin of the PM and former SLFP MP, told poloff that relations between the President and Prime Minister have always been “very bitter,” but are worse than ever now. The President has long regarded the Rajapakse family, which has had SLFP Members in Parliament for as long as the Bandaranaike clan, as the only real rival to her family’s dynastic grip on the party, Rajapakse said. Kumaratunga thus sees the Prime Minister’s candidacy as a lose-lose situation for her, Rajapakse suggested. If he wins, the Rajapakse position in the party is strengthened at the Bandaranaikes’ expense; if he loses, the party (the leadership of which Kumaratunga wants to pass on to her son Vimukthi, now a 27-year-old veterinary student) as a whole is weakened. (Note: Besides three sons of his own for whom he nurses similar ambitions of political ascendancy, the Prime Minister, like the President, has a brother who is an MP.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
Mahinda and Chandrika | Pic by Ishara S. Kodikara
A Leaked “CONFIDENTIAL” US diplomatic cable, dated September 30, 2005, updated the Secretary of State on Sri Lanka’s presidential election 2005. The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database. The cable was signed by the US Ambassador Jeffrey LunsteadThe cable details a US meeting with Deputy Minister Nirupama Rajapaksa, a cousin of Mahinda Rajapaksa.
The Ambassador wrote “Rajapakse agreed that the election was likely to be extremely close–perhaps separated by just a few hundred thousand votes–and thus the President’s apparent decision so far not to campaign for the SLFP candidate (she is scheduled to leave the country soon once again–this time to Paris) is likely to hurt the PM. ‘It is also strange of the brother (Foreign Minister Anura Bandaranaike, who is still overseas) to stay away’ during the campaign, she noted. The pair’s behavior is fueling renewed speculation that the President may scuttle the PM’s chances by dissolving Parliament–perhaps just days before the election. Besides her brother, the President can count on the support of ‘very few SLFP’ers,’ according to Rajapakse–primarily Buddhist Affairs Minister Ratnasiri Wickremenayake, Finance Minister Sarath Amunugama, Deputy Information Minister Dilan Perera and Deputy Power Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage.”
“The local press, meanwhile, has been full of reports of confrontations and flare-ups between the President and the Prime Minister and his camp since her return. According to one unconfirmed report, the Prime Minister threatened to walk out of a September 29 Cabinet meeting in which the President raised the contradictions between the positions espoused by the Prime Minister in the JVP and JHU agreements and SLFP policies. In an apparent back-handed slap at the President’s efforts to rein him in, the PM has appointed outspoken JVP propagandist and Kumaratunga foe Wimal Weerawansa as official co-spokesman (along with pro-JVP Ports Minister Mangala Samaraweera) of his presidential campaign. Another front-page article highlighted the President’s call at a September 29 public ceremony attended by the Prime Minister for the PM not to abandon educational reform efforts–as he his electoral pact with the JVP implicitly threatens to–begun during her administration.” he further wrote.
Placing a Comment the ambassador wrote “We have been hearing the same rumor about the dissolution of Parliament for more than a month, but have no indication that this is something seriously under consideration by the President. That said, Kumaratunga’s displeasure with the PM is obvious. She had hoped to leave a legacy as a pro-peace president, with the controversial tsunami aid agreement (known as the P-TOMS) with the SIPDIS Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam as a hallmark of those efforts. That the PM’s agreement with the Kumaratunga-baiting JVP repudiates these policies–and specifically vows to abnegate her cherished P-TOMS–must be especially unbearable to her. The contents of the still-unpublished manifesto should provide a good indication of which SLFP heavyweight prevails in this battle.”
Related posts;
Read the Cable below for further details;
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 COLOMBO 001730 

Re-imagining development in Sri Lanka: In conversation with Nilakshi De Silva

Groundviews   20 Nov, 2012
Nilakshi De Silva is a Senior Research Professional at the Centre for Poverty Analysis (CEPA), and in this interview, talks about the multi-faceted challenges facing development in Sri Lanka post-war, including the nature and extent of poverty in the country. She is the second interviewee from CEPA featured on Groundviews this year, the first being CEPA’s Executive Director, Priyanthi Fernando.
The interview with Nilakshi is anchored to Re-imagining Development? An Exchange of Ideas based on the Sri Lankan Experience, the title of CEPA’s 2012 Symposium looking at equitable, sustainable, inclusive development in Sri Lanka. Though the Symposium’s dedicated site features a lot of interesting content but no real conversation around some of the ideas flagged in this interview, CEPA’s institutional output has for years focussed on development as more than just economic prosperity or year on year GDP growth.
Early on in the conversation, Nilakshi flags the importance of looking at poverty not just as something that afflicts the poor, but as a structural problem, and how looking at the challenges of poverty alleviation through this holistic perspective has also changed CEPA’s own thinking about and approach to development over 10 years. Nilakshi talks about a significant and growing disconnect between the development that is being delivered to the people today, and their real expectations, ideas, visions and values of a good life.
We then talk about the challenges of changing the minds and perceptions of policy makers to look more broadly at development and poverty alleviation, in a country where the dominant discourse of both issues is pegged to high economic (and GDP) growth alone. Nilakshi answers by noting that it is important to not over-estimate the role of policymakers and under-estimate the role of civil society in shaping a more coherent and just developmental discourse. SHe laments the lack of discussion and debate in civil society about alternative ideas around development, and goes into why this is the case. She also explores why some of the rich debates at the field level may not, as much as they could and should, be making it to the radar of Colombo based civil society and media.
Nilakshi also states a number of interesting examples from CEPA’s field work where people around the country have a richer understanding of development than just economic prosperity and wealth generation, as well as perspective of women and their role (plus choices they can make) in economic growth.
When asked as to what she thinks is the most pressing challenge for development post-MDGs and in post-war Sri Lanka, Nilakshi’s notes that there is great and growing concern that despite high economic growth, inequality in Sri Lanka is increasing apace. She also talks about the immense importance of universal education in social mobility (and poverty alleviation) and how, along with other systems like universal healthcare, this is now quickly breaking down. Nilakshi also notes that development seen just as shiny new buildings and infrastructure is a red herring, without looking at growing disparities in society.
Nilakshi talks about the lack of reflecting back on past developmental strategies and projects, in addition to very low national spending on R&D, as further aggravating bad policies and practices currently in play.
We then switch to CEPA’s Symposium, and how in 2012, it specifically looks at expanding the debate on development beyond just the domain of economists, by bringing in creative individuals who are filmmakers, the media and civil society writ large. Given CEPA’s own use of ICTs and in particular, web based social media, Nilakshi explores how technology can help expand and enrich the debates on development, as well as fertilise the Symposium itself with new ideas from unusual suspects.
Nilakshi ends the conversation by flagging the importance of thinking about the limits to consumption, without just thinking of acquiring more and more material wealth, since it is simply not sustainable. She is quick to say that it is not that material prosperity isn’t important, but that unbridled, it is more harmful than helpful. What is the society we want to have, and what choices do we have to make is the question Nilakshi ends by flagging, and by also noting that CEPA’s Symposium this year will tackle the issues we touched on in greater detail.
Israeli Attack on Gaza-It is time for the U.S. to re-examine its lockstep support of Israel.

http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgIsraeli attack

Nov-19-2012



Tangalle PS Chairman granted bail

MONDAY, 19 NOVEMBER 2012

Eight suspects including the Tangalle Pradeshiya Sabha Chairman who were in remand for nearly 11 months over the alleged killing of a Briton and criminal assault on a Russian woman in Tangalle on Christmas Day last year were today released on bail.
Tangalle Provincial High Court Judge Lalith Wijesekera ordered the suspects to mark their presence at the Tangalle Police Station on the first and third Sundays of each month and warned them not to intimidate the witnesses. He said if his instructions were violated he would be compelled to extend re-remand them.

The Judge ordered the suspects to surrender their passports to any court and in the absence of a passport an affidavit to be sworn to that affect.

He instructed the suspects not to change their residences, and that those signing as sureties should be residents of an area within the jurisdiction of Tangalle High Court and certified by the Grama Niladhari.

The following are the suspects granted bail: Tangalle PS chairman Sampath Chandra P. Vidanapathirana; W.P. Chaturanga; O.A. Lahiru Kelum; U.S. Deshapriya (Pannipitiya), M.S. Sarath alias Sahan, S.P.J. Chaturanga; H.P. Nuwan Chintaka and E.P. Nadeera.

They were indicted on charges of having shot to death M.Z. Shaif (32) a Briton and inflicting serious injuries to his Russian fiancée Victoria Alexandra (23) at Medilla guest house in Tangalle on Christmas Day last year.

Attorneys Nishantha Sandhabarana, Upali Mohotti, Iroshini Ramasinghe and Nilushi Weeraratne appeared for the defence while the prosecution was led by Aparna Suwandurugoda. (Ariyadasa Kodituwakku)


BBCSinhala.com

Monday, November 19, 2012

Increasing Indian vehicle prices to benefit China wreaks havoc

Prison genocide true version:


நிமலரூபனின் உயிரும் இன்றில்லை உடலும் இனியில்லை- பௌத்தம் மீண்டும் ஒருமுறை வெட்கித் தலைகுனிந்தது -குரு


A film by an Italian documentary maker  based on Channel 4's award-winning Sri Lanka's Killing Fields has been made public.Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields: Eyes On The Ground 


Increasing Indian vehicle prices to benefit China wreaks havoc


(Lanka-e-News -19.Nov.2012, 4.00AM) The debt burden contributing budget of MaRa , the only one of its kind in the world which withdrew the taxes on luxury Lamborghini racing cars , while raising the taxes on utility cars mostly used by the common man had created a storm of controversy within the country. Owing to this devastating lopsided policy , the prices of 80 % of the vehicles which are imported from India had shot up in price even above those imported from Japan. Based on unofficial sources , India has issued a warning to SL Govt. in this connexion.

Consequent upon these moves , the price of an Indian three wheeler had risen by Rs. 50,000/- , while the price of the cheapest car that is most popular in SL, the Maruti Alto had shot up by Rs. Two and half lakhs. The popular Indian Lorries , Ashok Leyland , TaTa have shot up by Rs. ten lakhs .

According to vehicle importers , the import of a second hand Japanese vehicle is better than the import of a brand new Indian vehicle under the circumstances., adding that the opportunity the customers had to import brand new vehicles had been deprived as a result. Using of new vehicles is advantageous to owners because fuel consumption is less and repairs are at a minimum, they point out.
These price changes are utterly unjust , and this is a move to benefit the Chinese Co. that is arranging vehicles in SL for the opening of Hambantota and Gampaha , sources say. 20 million dollars is to be invested in the Chinese vehicles to be arranged . The importers and customers accuse that these laws had been introduced to encourage the Sri Lankans to purchase these Chinese vehicles.

SL vehicle users are not favorably disposed towards purchasing Chinese lorries and buses . They frown on them because they are full of mechanical problems , and they have no second hand market value. The Chinese three wheelers are as bad. The petrol tank of the Chinese three wheeler is near the passenger’s back . Therefore , if a vehicle meets with an accident from behind , the passenger is vulnerable to catching fire by petrol getting spilt. Hence , the Chinese three wheelers , owing to these numerous drawbacks have no second hand value.

TNA wants jumbo Cabinet downsized to make devolution meaningful

Sampanthan calls for efficient, democratic and inexpensive administrative systems

 
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By Shamindra Ferdinando

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) yesterday said that it was the prerogative of the SLFP-led ruling coalition to appoint a special Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) or some other mechanism to examine various proposals pertaining to devolution of power, with the focus on the unit of devolution.

TNA leader, R. Sampanthan, MP, stressed that his party was ready to play a consequential role in the process if an agreement could be reached on an agenda to pave the way for a tangible action plan to achieve maximum possible devolution and the change of administrative structure, which would ease the burden on the taxpayers. The veteran politician was responding to a query raised by The Island in the wake of his parliamentary speech last Thursday.

Trincomalee District MP Sampanthan told Parliament that instead of nine provinces, the country could have four or five regions and thereby save public funds. Responding to another query by The Island, the MP said that all issues, inclusive of the fate of the Northern and the Eastern Provinces could be discussed. He said that the country could examine a new administrative structure without being guided by what was decided by colonial masters.

Sampanthan made his unprecedented proposal in the wake of the government considering the possibility of repealing the 13th Amendment to the Constitution with the 19th Amendment.

The TNA Chief emphasised that whatever the proposed constitutional amendments, it would be suicidal even to envisage proposals,which could entail additional burden on those struggling to make ends meet. "Let there be efficient, democratic and relatively inexpensive systems at national and regional levels to address grievances of the people. Democracy is best practised when people have direct access to their representatives at national and provincial or regional level," Sampanthan said.

Asked whether he had specific proposals in this regard, the MP said that the country could no longer afford to sustain a mega Cabinet, particularly in view of rising domestic and foreign debt. It was no longer a secret that the government was in neck deep in debt and that the country incurred substantial expenditure in debt servicing. "In fact, it is believed that further debt is being incurred to service the existing debt and one wonders where all this will lead the country to," the MP said.

The TNA leader lashed out at the government in Parliament last Thursday for squandering money on a mega Cabinet of ministers, whereas the Northern and Eastern Provinces had been deprived of specific allocations through Budget 2013.

MP Sampanthan told The Island that if the government was really desirous devolving power to the provinces or regions that would make many ministerial positions irrelevant. Constitutional amendments were necessary to increase the number of ministers allocated to each Provincial Council from present four, including the Chief Minister, he said.

The TNA leader questioned the absurdity of having 60 ministers and 36 deputy ministers, while the country was struggling on the economic front. Ninety six MPs are either ministers or deputy ministers. He said: "Is such a mega Cabinet required? Does the country need it? Can the country afford it? Is this mega Cabinet really serving the country or is it merely serving the party in power, continuing to support the party in whatever it does? And they are having it really good. How much is it costing the country to maintain such a large mega Cabinet of Ministers and Deputy Ministers?"

MP Sampanthan declared that curtailment of expenditure must start at the Centre. The number of ministers in the Centre must be reduced and the number of ministries in the provinces must be increased with more powers. In fact, instead of having nine provinces, the country can have four or five regions. That would be another way to reduce expenditure, the TNAleader said.

UN Has Disclosed The Civilian Killings And UN Failure; We Hold Ban Ki-moon Along With GoSL And LTTE – Mano

Colombo TelegraphBy Colombo Telegraph -November 19, 2012
UN has at last disclosed the fact that the Sri Lankan government succeeded in defeating the LTTE, only by killing over 40,000 innocent civilians and making almost that many to disappear says the Leader of Democratic People’s Front and Convener of Civil Monitoring Commission Mano Ganesan.
Mano Ganesan
‘The Charles Petrie report tells all. UN has failed in fulfilling its responsibility and preventing the mass murder. UNSG Moon failed with 40,000 plus Tamil lives. Today he cannot continue to walk away from his obligations again. UN Secretary General who rushed to Sri Lanka soon after the war was proclaimed ended, issued a joint statement on May/23/2012 with PresidentMahinda Rajapaksa raising the hopes of the dejected Tamils of this country. This joint statement spoke of President Rajapaksa’s expressed firm resolve to proceed with the implementation of the 13th Amendmentand further enhance this process and to bring about lasting peace in Sri Lanka. It also spoke extensively on relief, rehabilitation, resettlement, reconciliation and accountability with international human rights standards and Sri Lanka’s international obligations. The Tamils along with their international friends demand explanations from UNSG Ban Ki-moon“ he further said.
Ganesan also stated that the UN report submitted by the panel led by Charles Petrie, has further admitted that the UN, the apex global watchdog is to be blamed as the UN has failed in fulfilling its obligation with timely intervention to avert the genocide took place in Sri  Lanka during the last phase of the war.
‘Thus, along with the war parties Lankan government and the LTTE, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon too should be placed on the docks for the wrongdoings took place in Sri Lanka’ asserted a concerned Ganeshan.
Ganesan made the above remarks in his Facebook page and Twitter which have been picked up by international and national Tamil media today said the media communiqué issued by DPF media office. He further urged the global Tamil activists and human rights defenders to pursue if Moon could be indicted for this serious debacle of the UN in the capacity of its secretary general.
Mano Ganesan further said as follows: :
‘Moon cannot just say that the Lankan occurrences would be taken as a “lesson” and that UN would prepare itself to stop such massacres in the future. The UN has seen its share of genocides and what took place in Sri Lanka is not the first mass murder ever. For this reason, Ban Ki-moon could not flee responsibility by just claiming that the annihilation is unprecedented and that he was not prepared for such destruction in holocaustic proportions.
‘The precautionary actions and future alertness can come later. But now, he should act on the prolongation of Sri Lankan disaster which he failed to prevent. Tamils and global human rights organizations should demand from him what is his explanation for not acting to save the lives of innocent people when UN should have intervened and stopped it. Our voice should shake the UN system from its core and create shudder in the global community for their inaction.
In his Facebook he has said,  ‘It is a separate matter trying the criminals and punishing them. However, the current situation in Sri Lanka is unpardonable against the joint statement between UNSG Ban Ki-moon and president Rajapaksa made immediately after the war during Moon’s visit.
‘The government declines to accept that massacres have taken place at all. It persists among the Sinhalese masses that everyone killed has been a LTTE cadre. It refuses to admit the charge that it wantonly refused to provide a last chance by a limited ceasefire for three days for the innocent civilians to come to safer ground’.
‘Keep aside the war crimes. It could be clearly seen that the government continues to refuse to consider a fair solution for the simmering ethnic issue, which was the root cause why the Tamils resorted to armed struggle to begin with. The government now violates the pledge it made to the UNSG and world at large that it would agree to a just solution improved from 13A.  During the war the GoSL said repeatedly that it will arrive at a just political solution after it defeats the LTTE as tigers were the principal obstacle for reaching a just solution’.
‘Today the government drags its feet even in implementing the recommendations of the LLRC, which was appointed by this very government. At least, the government is not heeding to a simple prescription of the LLRC that the list of the disappeared, abducted and the surrendered should be made public.
‘In the meantime, military rule continues in the North, especially in Vanni, which has made the lives of Tamils particularly of the women and children pure hell. Although it is now over three years since the war was ended, the government is increasing the presence of the armed forces, against the LLRC recommendations. Instead of constructing houses for the displaced, the government is busily constructing Army cantonments and settlements in the Vanni and Batticaloa districts with the sinister goal of changing the demography’.
‘Furthermore, the government is encouraging attacks on Hindu, Islam and Christian religious locations of Tamil speaking people in an aggressive manner.  Without listening to the repeated calls of the Tamil leaders for power sharing within a truly peaceful and united country, it is blindly engaged in a spree to make and proclaim this island a Sinhala- Buddhist republic.’
’The government drags indefinitely holding the provincial council election in the North, when elections have been held in all other provinces in the country. It conducted presidential, parliamentary and LG elections in the north but not the PC elections. The Elections Commissioner has expressed his readiness to hold elections. It is the government that is holding it for sinister political reasons’
‘This government that shrewdly obtained all the assistance from India to defeat the LTTE, today has the audacity to tear down the 13th Amendment and throw it at the face of India. The government that earlier said that it would go beyond 13, now is engaged in a numbers game and tables number 19 which is 13 minus!’
‘In such a context, UNSG Moon cannot continue to walk away from his obligations again. UN Secretary General who rushed to Sri Lanka soon after the war was proclaimed ended, issued a joint statement on May/23/2012 with President Mahinda Rajapaksa raising the hopes of the dejected Tamils of this country. this statement joint statement spoke of President Rajapaksa’s expressed firm resolve to proceed with the implementation of the 13th Amendment andfurther enhance this process and to bring about lasting peace in Sri Lanka. It also spoke extensively on relief, rehabilitation, resettlement, reconciliation and accountability with international human rights standards and Sri Lanka’s international obligations.’
‘What has happened to this statement and the respective spirit ? We would like to ask Moon if the same cruel fate that befell on the innocent Tamil people during the last phase of the war, fell on this statement as well? Especially, we place Moon in the docks and ask him these questions.’
‘I call upon the collective voice of the Tamils living here as well as abroad and our brethren in Tamil Nadu with our international friends to act now. We should create waves in the UN system and among the world at large who stood inactive in the face of the exterminations took place in Sri Lanka’
What if the UN Had Spoken Out on Sri Lanka? (Graphic Images)

UN staff received from informants in the field: unconfirmed reports of 17,810 killed and 36,905 injured during 2009.
Images from Sri Lanka's Genocide of Tamil people.
Images from Sri Lanka's Genocide of Tamil people.
http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg(LONDON) - If today the United Nations announced that it had received unconfirmed reports of 50,000 casualties in a war off limits to journalists - wouldn't the world take notice and try and stop the killings? We now know the UN system had this information in 2009 about Sri Lanka and suppressed it. We know this because of an internal review, ciommssioned by the UN Secretary General, Ban ki Moon.
It's a report that concludes that the UN's conduct at the end of the civil war in Sri Lanka marked a "grave failure" that "should not happen again".
The document cites the UN's role in Rwanda, saying some lessons there were not learned and proved relevant to Sri Lanka.
Let's hope they're learned for Syria, but as the author of a book of survivors' stories from that war in Sri Lanka I am haunted by the thought of what might have been there.
The document concludes that, "in Colombo many senior staff simply did not perceive the prevention of killing of civilians as their responsibility. That's damning criticism but it's the nature of how and why they did this that's very hard to accept. The UN removed the executive summary that was present in the draft version prepared by Charles Petrie. This said, "Some have argued many deaths could have been averted had the Security Council and the Secretariat, backed by the UN country team, spoken out loudly early on, notably by publicizing casualty numbers".
Petrie's report meticulously documents how senior UN officials continuously tried to blame the Tamil Tiger rebels - a proscribed terrorist group - for the killings even while their own international staff told them the Sri Lankan government was responsible for the majority of deaths.
It was a bias that has slanted all coverage of the conflict since because it came from such an influential and reliable source - the UN no less.
On 9 March 2009 the UN did not share with a diplomatic briefing a casualty sheet their staff had prepared, "which showed that almost all the civilians casualties recorded by the UN had reportedly been killed by Government fire". They also failed to mention that two thirds of the killings were taking place inside "safe zones" unilaterally declared by the government, purportedly to protect civilians.
Three days later the UN Resident Coordinator in Colombo, Neil Buhne, and several under-secretary generals refused to stand by their own casualty data, claiming thei were not verified. Charles Petrie puts the best gloss on the suppressing of vital casualty information, saying rather euphemistically that the briefings "fail to address the reality" on the ground.
Then when the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, struggled to speak out about potential war crimes by the Sri Lankan government, internal communications in the annexes reveal Ban Ki Moon's then chef de cabinet, Vijay Nambiar, strongly imploring her to tone down and dilute her statement.
He even complained that her statement put the Tamil Tiger rebels and the government on the same footing. At this point Navi Pillay's statement is quoting figures the UN knew were low - the draft version of this report mentions much higher unconfirmed reports at the time of 5,687 killed and 10,067 injured.
These were figures coming out of the war zone collected by Tamil doctors, priests, NGO workers and the UN's local employees held hostage by the Tigers. The conflict was off limits to all independent observers so a few brave UN staff decided to set up a long distance data team in Colombo to try and corroborate the reports.
They compiled casualty lists but only verified a death if there were three independent sources. The Petrie report says it was a rigorous methodology following best practice. In this way the UN confirmed nearly eight thousand civilian deaths before it became impossible in late April for people under heavy fire to get out of their bunkers and actually verify information.

Senior UN diplomats, still working in posts where they deal with conflict related issues, are cited in the report constantly trying to wriggle out of accepting the casualty data their own staff prepared, undermining it by questioning its reliability. Never mind that these figures were much more carefully checked than death tolls cited for Syria or Afghanistan. Or for that matter, the general death toll the UN always cites in official documents of 100,000 killed in Sri Lanka during the whole course of the war.
Buried in the end of the annexes of the Petrie report is startlingly new casualty information that UN staff received from informants in the field: unconfirmed reports of 17,810 killed and 36,905 injured during 2009. The UN team verified about half of these cases but knew their figure was an undercount.
Surely if the world had been told the scale of the killing at the time, international condemnation might have averted some of the deaths and abuses after the war. Subsequently a UN report has said reports of up to 40,000 civilians killed were credible. The Petrie report increases this to say 70,000 people could possibly have died in those final five months of hell.
That's little comfort to the shattered broken survivors who watched friends and relatives die in agony, abandoned and betrayed by the international community. Starving, dirty and exhausted, they lived in ditches being pounded by multi barreled rocket fire, only getting out of flimsy shelters in the lulls in fire to bury the human body parts they found lying strewn around their tents to prevent the dogs eating them.
Families were so desperate they prayed that if they were to die it would be quickly and all together; loving parents contemplated suicide with their children because they couldn't see any chance of survival.
By May 2009 people were forced to abandon their dead and injured just to save themselves, literally walking over corpses and dodging bullets. They emerged only to be detained in sub-standard internment camps, paid for and built by the United Nations and its donors.
The only way for the UN to set the record straight on Sri Lanka now is for Ban ki Moon to set up an international investigation into war crimes in Sri Lanka. It was the recommendation of a panel of experts he commissioned to write a report last year but the Secretary General hesitated to take such a step without strong international backing. We now know from this internal review that his own legal department advised him he had the power to do it, but backed off. After the revelations of this inquiry it's an essential step to restore the UN's tattered credibility on Sri Lanka. And it's the very least Ban ki Moon owes the families of the tens of thousands of Tamil victims.
See this infographic chart showing what the UN knew in 2009 about casualty data and what it actually said in public. Download file
Frances Harrison is a former BBC Correspondent in Sri Lanka and the author of Still Counting the Dead: Survivors of Sri Lanka's Hidden War, published by Portobello Books (UK), House of Anansi (Canada) and Penguin ( India).

Rajapaksa And Mujica: Poorest President Of The World!

By Laksiri Fernando -November 19, 2012 
Dr Laksiri Fernando
Colombo TelegraphI am not first talking about Mahinda Rajapaksa of Sri Lanka, but Jose Mujicaof Uruguay. I am not talking about poverty in terms of vision, but modesty in terms of wealth or possession. I am also not saying that Mahinda or other Rajapaksa’s don’t have a ‘vision’ at all, but it has become completely crooked especially after defeating the LTTE. What an opportunity that they have missed to be magnanimous, be reasonable or simply ‘Just’ on the question of the Tamils and other minorities in the country.
The ‘vision’ on the questions of social cleavages, poverty or poor people in the country also has become extremely crooked by catering to the family, the superrich and the political cronies. Divineguma Bill is an example where in the name of the poor and uplifting of their lives, the power and authority in respect of development and a large amount of budgetary allocations are kept within one Ministry and one Minister who is President’s brother. In addition, the Bill disregards the fundamental tenets of the Constitution and the principles of devolution. It is in this context that the example of Jose Mujica of Uruguay is relevant to Sri Lanka.
Jose Mujica
Jose Mujica, the President elect in 2010 in Uruguay, parallel to the ascendancy of President Rajapaksa for the second term in the same year, is still living a frugal life. He donates 90 per cent of his official salary, equivalent to $ 12,000 to charity according to a BBC report quoted by Colombo Telegraph. Born in 1935, he is 10 years senior to President Rajapaksa and different in many respects primarily in terms of ideology and life style. He is simply a committed socialist and a people’s President unlike President Rajapaksa today. If there had been a semblance of ‘people’s affinity’ of the latter before, it has completely vanished. Perhaps even before, it was a fake.
Early in life, Mujica was with the National Party, very much similar to the UNP or the SLFP. But he joined the Tupamaro National Liberation Movement (MLN-T) in 1960 – a movement in several ways similar to the JVP in Sri Lanka. He was inspired by the Cuban revolution in 1959. MLN-T was an urban guerrilla organization which was perhaps necessary under the dictatorial rule in Uruguay, unlike the JVP violence in Sri Lanka in that respect. He was in jail for several times and was finally released in 1985 after the country’s democratic transformation. He renounced violence completely thereafter.
Tupamaro was transformed into an open organization after 1985 and joined with other left organizations the “Movement for Popular Participation (MPP)” was formed. Yet, it worked within the “Broad Front,” a coalition of several democratic forces and organizations. In 1994, Mujica was elected into the House of Representatives and in 1999 and again in 2004 into the Senate. In 2005, he became the Minister of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries. There were no three ministries (or even more) for these interrelated functions unlike in Sri Lanka.
Throughout years, Mujica’s policies have changed a lot, but not opportunistically. In recent years, he has advocated a more ‘flexible political left’ which can think outside the box. But he has not changed in his main philosophical principles or life style. He maintains good relations with Uruguay’s big neighbour, Argentina, irrespective of some controversial disputes. In predominantly a Catholic country, he remains secular and maintains he is an atheist. He is a radical thinker in many respects.
He lives in his wife’s farmland near Montevideo even helping her in growing flowers for a living, in his spare time. He does not believe that he has to control everything in the country. He has shunned a luxurious official residence in Montevideo continuing his principles of modesty. His main declared personal asset in 2010 washis Volkswagen Beetle valued $ 1,800 and he added half of his wife’s farm assets amounting to $ 215,000. We hope he was truthful unlike our Sri Lankan politicians.
No one would say that all Presidents or all politicians should live like Jose Mujica. He is only an extreme example. His life style, as he admits, is personal to him but not to anyone else. But the point is the contrast between him and others including the President of the US or Sri Lanka. The contrast is a matter of genuine public interest. Do we have to emulate the President of US?
Life Styles                                                            Read More
STF staged well planned assassination at the Welikada prison compound
[ Monday, 19 November 2012, 09:01.39 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Several prisoners were forcibly shot dead during the recent Welikada prison riots, prison sources said.
Since end of the riots all the prisoners were detained in their respective cells.
Group of Special Task Force members arrive with the name list ordered the prisoners to line up and later on shoot out 11 of them.
According to the prison officials stated later on they found 11 dead bodies in the prison compound.
At present officials have tapping the phone calls of prison officials. Due to this these prison officials were fear to provide information’s towards media.
Sri Lanka's bloody civil war

Shattered lives

Banyan-Nov 19th 2012

Asia

The EconomistTHE civil war fought in Sri Lanka between the brutal Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam and the government ground on for quarter of a century, claiming perhaps 130,000 lives. In early 2008 the government launched an all-out assault on the Tamil Tigers, with the aim of their unconditional surrender. Hundreds of thousands of civilians were caught up in this final offensive, trapped in a war zone that got smaller and smaller until it consisted of a narrow strip of beach between two warring sides. The UN estimates that 40,000 civilians alone died in the five months before the war's end in May 2009, when the Tigers surrendered. Our interview here is with Frances Harrison, a former BBC correspondent who has written a powerful book about the war's final months, "Still Counting the Dead: Survivors of Sri Lanka's Hidden War", from the accounts of Tamils who lived through the hell.
At the war's end the Sri Lankan government was jubilant, and much of the world relieved that the long conflict was over. At the time, the scale of civilian suffering was not appreciated. Not least, the UN had abandoned its mission in Tamil-controlled territory on the eve of the final onslaught. It has since struggled to come to terms with how it handled matters in Sri Lanka, leaving Tamils to their fate and failing to publicise the fact that the government was deliberately shelling civilians.
On November 15th the UN published an internal review, concluding that a "grave failure" had taken place in Sri Lanka—a systemic breakdown that led to the UN failing in its responsibility to protect civilians. The report fingers various UN agencies, from the Security Council down. The secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, says it will have profound implications for the institution. The case of Sri Lanka underscores how the UN struggles to learn from humanitarian tragedies. The hope is that it will do better this time.