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, January 16, 2013


Sri Lanka president picks ally as chief justice, lawyers protest

Reuters
By Shihar Aneez and Ranga Sirilal-Tue Jan 15,
(Reuters) - Sri Lanka's President Mahindra Rajapaksa appointed a close ally as chief justice on Tuesday, two days after he controversially sacked the country's top judge for impeachment in the face of opposition from the Supreme Court.
Mohan Peiris, Rajapaksa's cabinet lawyer and former attorney general, was sworn-in amid tight security at the Supreme Court as dozens of lawyers held candles in protest outside the traditional building in central Colombo.
Shirani Bandaranayake's dismissal has threatened a constitutional crisis in the small island state which has slowly been finding its feet after a quarter century-long civil war ended in 2009.
The Supreme Court had ruled that Bandaranayake's removal was illegal, prompting the United States and United Nations to voice concern.
Opposition lawmakers, religious leaders and lawyers have also expressed outrage after parliament, controlled by Rajapaksa's party, voted to impeach the country's first female chief justice on Friday.
Bandaranayake's rapid fall from favor and the resulting clash between the government and judiciary has underlined the power wielded by Rajapaksa and his family in the island nation, where he has been president since 2005.
Presidential spokesman Mohan Samaranayake told Reuters that Peiris was sworn in on Tuesday.
Around 100 special taskforce police officers were deployed at the country's Supreme Court on Tuesday ahead of the swearing-in, as lawyers protested Peiris's appointment at the court's entrance.
"Let's rise against the dictatorship. Today marks the funeral of the independent judiciary," said Sunil Watagala, a member of Lawyers Collective, a judicial activist group, as other lawyers blew out candles to symbolize the start of a dark era in the court.
Lawyers Collective has urged all Supreme Court judges not to accept Peiris's appointment. The Centre for Policy Alternatives, a think tank, filed a fundamental rights petition on Tuesday to prevent Peiris accepting the appointment, which was ignored.
Bandaranayake fell from favor with Rajapaksa after she ruled that the president's younger brother, Basil Rajapaksa, would need to seek further approvals for his proposal of a $614 million development budget.
"The legal paternity is not ready to accept the puppet appointed by the authoritarian executive," said Srinath Perera, a lawyer.
Peiris, a 38-year veteran of the legal profession, has served as state counsel, attorney general and legal adviser to the Sri Lankan Cabinet of Ministers.
Political risk consultancy Eurasia Group said in a note that Peiris, known for his closeness to the Rajapaksa family, could run into a risk of being questioned by the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals on the legality of any decision he makes.
(Editing by Henry Foy and Jeremy Laurence)

Mohan’s appointment stirs displeasure among Sinhala nationalists

Wednesday, 16 January 2013
The Sinhala Buddhist extremists it is learnt are disturbed by the appointment of Mohan Peiris to fill the vacant Chief Justice post.
Sinhala Buddhist forces like the JHU, Patriotic National Movement, Wimal Weerawansa, Nalin de Silva and Sarath N. Silva worked hard to remove Chief Justice Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake in an unconstitutional manner.
Their request from the President was to appoint a Sinhala Buddhist person as the next Chief Justice. They requested that Supreme Court judge Sathya Hettige be appointed as the Chief Justice. Minister Basil Rajapaksa supported Hettige since he is related to Basil’s wife. The President whoever after nodding his head to all the requests, appointed Mohan Peiris as the Chief Justice. The announcement had shocked Minister Wimal Weerawansa, who by then had started teaching the law to the judiciary. Sources say that the minister was now keeping silent not even answering telephone calls.
The Sinhala extremists say that Mohan Peiris’s appointment has resulted in a majority of the 11 member Supreme Court judges being from other races and religions. The Supreme Court judges who are non-Buddhists are Shirani Bhuran Thilekawardena, K. Sri Pavan. S.I. Imam, Saleem Masoof and Priyasath Dep. Some Sinhala Buddhist elements had even requested that at least Nimal Gamini Ameratunge should have been appointed as an acting Chief Justice.

‘God’s law’ To ‘Dasa Rajah Dharma’ And Shirani As The Lawful Holder Of The Office

By Charitha Ratwatte -January 16, 2013 
Charitha Ratwatte
Colombo TelegraphNatural law is a system of law which is determined by nature and thus universal. Natural law refers to the use of reason to analyse human nature and deduce binding rules of moral behaviour. Natural law holds that morality is a function of human nature and reasoning and those valid moral principles of conduct can be discerned by studying the nature of humanity in society. Basic and fundamental rights and values are considered to be inherent in or universally cognisable by virtue of human reason or human nature.
As human society emerged from the itinerant hunter gatherer stage to one of stabilised and settled communities in the fertile river valleys of West Asia, South Asia, Central Asia and China, universal rules of conduct and behaviour evolved from the natural law principles, which human beings followed, to a code of universally accepted rules which were enforced by the leaders of the community.
When disputes arose among community members over enforcement of the rules by the leaders, the necessity for interpretation, arbitration and adjudication emerged. Over time a group of persons, other than the leaders who codified and enforced the rules, trusted by the community, to listen to all sides of a dispute and to be fair and unbiased in determining the issues in dispute, of necessity emerged. The determinations made by these adjudicators began to be universally accepted as applying to later disputes, relating a similar set of facts, and thereby precedent and common law emerged.
Common law is a legal tradition whereby certain rights or values are legally cognisable by virtue of judicial recognition or articulation. Two fundamental principles – the rule against bias and the right to a fair hearing – have over time come to be recognised as the two fundamental principles of natural justice.
Manmade law                            Read More

Present Situation And The Way Forward: A Proletarian Revolutionary Perspective

Colombo Telegraph
By Surendra Ajit Rupasinghe –January 16, 2013 
Ajit Rupasinghe
The prevailing political situation is centered on the impeachment and sacking of the Chief Justice by the Executive President, following an address approved by a majority of 155 rubber-stamp members of parliament. The entire process surrounding the impeachment  has revealed the inner workings of the Capitalist dictatorship exercised through the State, under the present Rajapakse Regime. The logic and dynamics of this process should be carefully analyzed, since there are many related dimensions and aspects involved. The bourgeois parliament, already a circus of clowns, racketeers, drug lords, rapists and murderers, was further qualitatively degraded  to the level of a kangaroo court, where the complainant functioned as the judge, jury and executioner. The verdict was given by a parliamentary select committee made up of government members. Both in method, procedure and practice, all norms of natural justice were flouted with bloated arrogance, while state terrorism was unleashed against  all democratic protest. The debased process of impeachment certainly violates all norms of natural justice, democratic procedure and decency, and should be righteously  condemned. Bringing the judiciary under direct control of the Executive and a rubber-stamp parliament, takes away even the basic minimum safeguards against the imposition of  an arbitrary, unrestrained, bulldozing despotism.
The impeachment attests to a profound and intensifying structural, and if you like, organic crisis of the political system, headed by a Regime that is driven by a singular and overriding need to monopolize absolute state power and control all its instruments of enforcement, while spreading its tentacles into all avenues of aggrandizement and enrichment, with a single will to perpetuate the Rajapakse dynasty. The Rajapakse regime, as much as all previous regimes, represents the feudal-colonial State foisted on us by British colonialism. This model of representative parliamentary democracy  is the most effective form of exercising the Capitalist Dictatorship on behalf of world imperialism. This form of bourgeois dictatorship is the most effective means of dividing and deluding the masses into believing that it is they who exercise political sovereignty over the State and that they wield political power to decide their life and future, when in fact, it is the comprador-bureaucratic ruling class representing the interests of imperialism that wields sovereignty and the monopoly of political power in order to manipulate the people ideologically, divide them politically and suppress them through violent terrorist repression. We know that elections are a trap to ensnare the masses to take sides in this deadly political game and participate in deciding on which party or individual of the ruling class should rule over them- and still believe that they enjoy the supreme and sovereign democratic right to decide their life and future. Representative parliamentary democracy, everywhere in the world is the tried and tested system of exercising and covering up what Lenin termed “ the naked terrorist dictatorship of the bourgeoisie”.
All the various institutions of the State under the capitalist dictatorship- the Executive, Legislature, the Judiciary, Armed Forces, etc, are integral parts of the apparatus of control, manipulation and domination by the ruling class to preserve and perpetuate their rule. This is their essential and defining function. A terrified and supine Elections Commissioner legitimized the most grotesque hijack in electoral history to bring the Executive President to power. Is it not a fact, that the position of Chief Justice was, and remains, a powerful   and indispensible force in enforcing this dictatorship? The Supreme Court paved the way for the consolidation of the Rajapakse regime. The sacked Chief Justice legitimized the grab towards centralizing absolute dictatorial power of the Regime by approving the 18th Amendment as an urgent bill, through which the limits of tenure of the Regime were lifted and all institutions and organs of state power brought under the Executive President.  This is besides the other  acts through which the SC was consistently deployed to suppress the fundamental democratic rights of the people. In spite of  all the constitutional guarantees, the Tamil nation remains under brutal military occupation and political subjugation. Student leaders are hunted down and killed. Abductions, disappearances, torture and extra-judicial killings continue with absolute impunity. The Executive Presidency has been instituted constitutionally by this very same bourgeois  parliament and reinforced by every successive government. It serves the exact needs of Imperialism and Finance Capital, and its local feudal-comprador ruling class to enforce the form of dictatorship that would best facilitate imperialist penetration, domination, and exploitation through imposing its neo-liberal economic agenda on the country and the people. This hijacking of the judiciary and centralizing state power in the hands of the Executive Presidency is a logical culmination of a political trajectory followed by every single political party and government representing the ruling class.
In essence, content and purpose, all the institutions of the Comprador Capitalist State, including the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary, are necessary instruments of domination, deception and suppression in maintaining the neo-colonial system. Yet, the system of bourgeois democracy and representative government require some formal degree of constitutional limits and separation of powers to ensure that the ruling class as a whole may share state power and to ensure some degree of protection against the arbitrary exercise of totalitarian dictatorship. The Mahinda Rajapakse Regime is merely reordering and fine tuning this apparatus of  the State to suit its agenda of consolidating and perpetuating its dynastic rule through centralizing and concentrating hegemonic state power and subordinating all its institutions of enforcement to the writ of the Executive Presidency. Whatever guarantees of  basic constitutional principles, human and democratic rights that even bourgeois democracy requires to grease its system of domination has now been effectively negated, paving the way for the naked terrorist dictatorship to function without any pretense of constitutionality or legality.
Considering these realities, the strategic orientation  of genuine proletarian revolutionary forces should not bereduced or confined to the defense or restoration of the Chief Justice, or restoring some balance or separation of power between the three branches of the State, or for calling for the ‘Rule of Law’ or the ‘Independence of the Judiciary’. These are important issues in the defense of bourgeois democratic rights in the face of the chauvinist-militarist-terrorist juggernaught represented by the Regime. However, the spiraling crisis of a rotting and defunct neo-colonial system based on perpetuating imperialist exploitation and plunder cannot be addressed, let alone fundamentally resolved, by restoring these values and norms of bourgeois democracy. It would be like oxygenating a corpse. The strategic orientation of the revolutionary proletariat at this moment should be to expose the essence of the naked terrorist Dictatorship of the Bourgeoisie and mobilize the masses to overthrow it and replace it with a Proletarian Democratic State.
This does not mean that we cannot unite with the anti-Regime protestations of honest radical and progressive democratic forces who demand the defense and restoration  of bourgeois democratic rights, when they are being trampled and dispensed with by an extreme chauvinist- militarist, crony-narco- mafia, comprador capitalist regime, as concentrated in the politics of this impeachment and sacking of the Chief Justice. The real agenda behind this repulsive move by the Regime is to ensure that in the future no institution or agency of the State shall defy its will to secure absolute  state power in perpetuity. The crimes and atrocities of the corrupt and blood-soaked Regime is such that it cannot afford to lose power, lest it is brought before the tribunal of the people. To be sure, world imperialism and its regional agents- whether the US, EU, China, Russia nor India, give a damn about democratic rights, or issues of governance. They shall accommodate the Regime and all its crimes and atrocities, until it fails to deliver, and a better option is at hand. All these reactionary powers act in their own interests  in advancing their geo-political strategic agendas.
What has been the role of the so-called Parliamentary Opposition? The UNP has played along, dancing to the tune of the Regime, while putting up a show of the most feeble and sterile opposition. The JVP, Cotta Road Communists, LSSP, DLF, DNA and other agents of the system have taken utmost concern to wriggle their way out, while legitimizing the sanctity and sovereignty of the feudal-colonial state and system. Some other ”Left” forces have capitulated to the agenda  of the various fractions of the ruling class, while some have taken an extreme stand in dismissing the whole crisis as just an intra-class conflict of the ruling class in which the people have no stake.
The proletarian revolutionary stand and line should be to unite with all democratic opposition to this drive to aggrandize all power and wealth in the hands of the Regime, while not merging with, or tailing behind bourgeois oppositional forces of the ruling class. It should seize upon all cracks in the system to isolate the Regime, while maintaining its own independent revolutionary line and initiative. The cracks and splits within the judicial system as expressed by the decisions of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal in declaring the entire impeachment process to be illegal and unconstitutional are strategic openings in isolating the Regime. Certainly, the defiantly courageous and determined stand by the legal community in the face of state terrorist repression should be united with and supported. The need of the hour and the way forward is to mobilize the proletariat and the oppressed masses to grasp the real essence of the naked terrorist dictatorship of the bourgeoisie through  all this impending crises and political turmoil, while taking tactical steps to isolate and overthrow the Rajapakse Regime. A parliament of the people, baptized on the streets of resistance, representing the political will of the workers and all oppressed people, could be a focus of  advancing democratic struggle. This should be conceived as an integral step in overthrowing the Comprador Capitalist State and establishing a People’s Democratic State as the necessary path towards waging the Socialist Revolution, in the context of advancing the victory of the Communist Revolution worldwide.
*Surendra Ajit Rupasinghe: Ceylon Communist Party (Maoist)

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Oil threw on members of Movement for Equal Rights in Jaffna
[ Tuesday, 15 January 2013, 09:32.54 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Movement for Equal Rights organized signature collection campaign at 10.00 am in Jaffna today against military ruling in North and East parts of the country..
Members of the Army intelligence unit threw oil on journalists and civilians arrive to sign in the petition.
Movement obtained signatures from people on demanding to release Jaffna university students, stop military ruling in the Northern and Eastern parts of the island, stop illegal abductions and arrests and release all political prisoners of this country.
Members of the intelligence unit carried out oil attack against Journalists of Uthayan, Thinakural and Valampuri newspapers.
However members threw oil on journalist has escaped from a Navy vehicle, sources said.

Tuesday , 15 January 2013
Systemized cultural degeneration is occurring in the Jaffna peninsula. Our beloved youths are dragged to this deterioration life style which is systematically planned.
 
Such statement was made by Supreme Court former Judge C.V.Wicknenswaran yesterday Monday at Vattucottai Hindu Youth Association head office building inauguration ceremony. The event was chaired by Hindu Youth Association Leader Attorney K.Sugash.
 
Judge C.V.Wicknenswaran was the Guest of Honor, addressed the event said, the most affected by war today is women. Many males have died. Some have escaped to foreign countries. But their mothers, sisters, spouses and children are facing a variety of hindrances.
 
They are in situation of facing to the cruelties of perpetrators. Not only is this, but now in Jaffna peninsula, well planned cultural degeneration occurring.
 
Women from here are taken to South are engaged in prostitution. At the same time prostitution, sexual abuses, thefts, abductions contract killings have increased to unprecedented level which has not occurred in the past.
 
When I came here in the beginning of 21st century, women attired in jewels even at 12 midnight, were able to roam, without any fear or tension was said by the inhabitants. But now a situation has arisen that people are tensed even they are indoors.
 
By statements are that this fear and tension was created by those who have come from outside, but it is created by the youths from the Jaffna soil who does not have any self-respect or dignity which is certain.
 
I assume that our beloved youths from the Northern Province are in a well-planned manner are dragged to a degeneration life style.  Our young society has gone beyond the limit of giving the highest honor to the images of film artistes.  What happened to our young society which was in the best standard in education, attitudes, behaviors, and audacity?
 
Today our males and females for their selfish attitudes are earnestly waiting to do anything without realizing that they are manipulated as Muppets by those planners and now they have got entangled to their traps.
Some on consumption of liquor and smoking cigarettes are a hindrance to the commuters travelling along with them in buses which is against law.
Instigating violence.  
Involvements in unscrupulous activities.  
Involvements in stealing and burglaries linked with outsiders.
Behaving in the worst manner and disturbing women mostly mentally and physically. 
Today the young generation is getting developed totally a spoiled society.
 
 
We have read stories about monsters. Now monster attitudes have got emerged in our atmosphere. Our future is getting devalued by selfish and brutality persons.
 
An important the reason for the ongoing activities is lack of unity amongst the society.  Many blunders done in outside, one of us is in the backdrop is secretly operating.  You'll could easily gauge if you deeply examine.
 
The activities which we are performing with selfishness, the consequence are not sensed, by those unscrupulous persons and they are still proceeding in deceitful activities.
 
A Tamil's contribution was involved in the incident of the innocent woman's life. We are betraying our own selves.  Don't become servants to those come from outside. Our society should not be engaged in Uncle Jobs.  You should grow unity among yourselves.
 
You'll could advice your similar age group youngsters. It is important that you should make them aware that they are becoming slaves to the well planned acts.
 
Our parents should show more concern towards the young society. Children had not done any constructive actions, and without showing hatred against them, should mingle with them in a friendly manner and should take appropriate actions.
 
We should teach them the truth. For example just observe the person who is selling drugs. He is located outside the school and selling sweet goods and later selling the goods mixing with the drugs and finally he is ending up in selling drugs.
 
In the long run, students are getting addicted to drugs. They are getting addicted to prostitution, sexual abuse, smoking,  Displays of pornographic films, and arranging  cultural events is changing the live styles of Tamil youths, and they should be made aware that their rights
 
 
If we think we becoming preys to the well systemized activities get recorded they will become more active. This should be sorted out by you'll. Your parents and teachers should guide you.
 
 
Our tradition is from the ancestry. One of our secret evil acts will degrade our heritage which we should not forget.

Militarized charity and land grabbing: Experience of Keppapulavu in the Vanni

--15 Jan, 2013
DSC00071Groundviews
I read with interest the article by Amal de Chickera titled “Racing Tanks with Bicycles: A Parable of ‘Reconciliation’ in Sri Lanka” and response to this by Sri Lanka Unites (SLU). I had often struggled with issues raised by Amal and SLU in my interactions with friends, colleagues and people in the North and East in the last six years, especially in the Vanni after the end of the war. I have a particularly strong attachment to the people of Keppapulavu referred to in both articles, because of my frequent visits to meet them last few years – in their present place of residence and when they were in Menik Farm.
The basic fact SLU hides – Keppapulavu is illegally occupied by the military
A simple basic fact that Amal’s article notes and SLU avoids, is that the people of Keppapulavu were compelled to go into the middle of a jungle as their village has been occupied by the military.  This information is by no means a secret and is widely available in the public domain, for anyone concerned and interested enough to find out. I have shared a detailed account of  and others too have written extensively on this in websites and some English and Tamil newspapers (see for example this article).
I believe that the omission by SLU of this simple and fundamental fact that is central to the Keppapulavu tragedy is deliberate. I could be wrong, and the omission could have been due to ignorance, but I think it is unlikely that a group such as SLU could be ignorant of this fundamental fact, considering their community contacts as indicated in their own article.
In my understanding, the occupation of Keppalulavu by the military is totally illegal. It does not follow procedures laid out in Sri Lankan law for the Government to acquire land. And I believe this is also wrong from a humane, moral, ethical, religious or spiritual perspective. It is daylight robbery. There maybe those who disagree, and I would be interested in knowing on how they would feel if the military, or anyone else for that matter, occupied their homes, land, paddy fields and properties that have been acquired as a result of generations of hard work and savings; without following any legal procedures, consultations with the community nor offering alternative options and compensation.
So to make it clear – these people are FROM Keppapulavu, but are now NOT IN Keppapulavu. They have been compelled to reside in a jungle area that was cleared up AFTER they were compelled to go there, when the Government had more than three years to make the necessary arrangements. It is in effect another camp for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs); It is re-displacement, not re-settlement. It is another version of Menik Farm – with the military deciding who can visit them, and whoever is allowed in being closely monitored.  A part of this ‘eye-washing’ process was in the notice board that was put up at the entrance to the jungle patch where the people were sent, which read ‘Keppapulavu Model Village’.
Can and should we avoid fundamental issues by branding them as “political”?The occupation of Keppapulavu by the military is a political decision, based on military interests. But for the people who have been robbed of their way of life and personal belongings, it is very personal, and not just political. So this is not a discussion about “political issues”, rather, it is a discussion about having people’s houses and properties being stolen; an entire community’s way of life being dismantled. This was the dominant and pressing issue mentioned to me, in the conversations I had with the community every time I met with them after they were compelled to reside in a jungle area near their own village. I find it difficult to believe people have not told SLU about this. Perhaps it is easier for some writers andcommentators to dismiss this daylight robbery by the military as being a “legal and political issue” when it’s not their land and property being stolen. Or perhaps because they are scared to discuss it due to reprisals from the military and political forces that made that decision, or their close alignments with them? Discussing issues that have direct bearing on people’s daily life are often political and controversial, and doesn’t mean those discussing are involved in party politics. Indeed, deliberately avoiding discussing this is also a political decision!
Anyone who makes the effort to go and meet the people directly will know the truth, as long as you go without military escort. I have personally encountered how people have stopped mid-sentence when military personnel are in the vicinity. If you do try and speak to the people independently, and go as friends or in a legitimate professional capacity such as a journalist or religious leader, you would have to contend with threats and arbitrary and illegal restrictions posed by the military – as I, and many others had to undergo. Some of us have even written about these threats and restrictions (for example, see Restrictions and intimidation on journalists covering resettlement process in the Vanni and Menik Farm And Beyond…). If these restrictions were based on any law, no one in the military or the Government has explained them to us, even though we had asked. To my knowledge, there has been no action taken against those who placed illegal restrictions on us. In my case, and at least in the case of another journalist, the Government Agent for Mullaitivu had expressly told us that we could go and speak to the people, and visit this civilian area, and even take some video footage of the area. Most importantly though, the people were eager to share their stories with us, and even queried as to why the military was stopping and intimidating those who wanted to come and hear their stories and tell them to country and the world.
Why involve and glorify the military in charity?It seems a cruel irony to make any donations via the same military that has stolen, and are currently occupying their homes and paddy lands and in essence, destroyed their way of life. Especially when that military that is very friendly towards SLU and their partners, threatens and restricts concerned individuals from hearing the stories of these people. Not to forget also that the military (along with the LTTE) have been responsible for multiple killings, disappearances, injuries and other trauma that these people have been made to undergo.
I recognize that some, if not all who have made donations might have had a genuine intention to help. And definitely cycles and school bags etc. were needed and would have been appreciated by the recipients, because the Government – whose responsibility this is – is not providing these when they seem to have ample funds to build lavish monuments and structures for the military. Even if organizations outside the Government such as SLU, would like to take on such projects, is there a need to distribute these goods via the very military? Some military personnel may genuinely want to help these people at an individual level, but surely they could do so in their private capacity? I have come across some who have done so quietly.
I admire and encourage charitable initiatives to respond to humanitarian and immediate needs, especially by youth. However, I believe that “glorifying” the oppressors – which in this case is the military, and contributing (deliberately or otherwise) to hiding the truth, can only stand to undermine all the good that is being done. I believe that type of charity must be condemned, challenged and discouraged. I have also been involved in such charitable projects in the Vanni and know others who do so much more regularly than me, and on a much larger scale, but without military involvement. Here, I seem to find some common ground with SLU, who says they don’t work with military on principle, and that they have not done so before, even as they admit to the Keppapulavu project being an exception.
So IT IS possible to donate and engage in charity without military involvement, in the Vanni. What is required is creativity to overcome restrictions by the military, and the courage to face up to any potentially inevitable threats and intimidation, and of course the conviction and commitment.
To tell the people’s story or our story?
Many of us who have been working with similarly displaced people, have tried to focus on relating the stories of the people whose struggles we are trying to support, rather than writing about ourselves and the experience of the project itself. We try and publicize photographs of the reality of their lives and the challenges they face, and their struggles, rather than exhibit our work. We try and leave ourselves out of the narrative, and rather relate the stories of those who would like to share their stories, but who are prevented or suppressed from doing so. This is what we tried to do in our many visits to assist the people of Keppapulavu.
Is it not fair that the stories of the problems people face should get at least as much publicity as is given to the success of a group’s charity project? And if a group feels strongly in favour of publicizing photographs displaying the involvement of the military, would they at least be willing to consider giving equal publicity to photographs of the lands, houses and paddy fields of the people of Keppapulavu, now occupied by the military?
The people of Keppapulavu have been struggling to return home –by means of protests, making appeals and courageously telling their story to anyone who would care to listen and then speak or write about them. SLU says they visited Kepapulavu people several times “to meet the people and discuss what could be done” and that their efforts were based on people’s requests. Based on my own interactions with the Keppapulavu people, I find it hard to believe that they had not indicated as their primary need (even if not the most urgent) as being able to reclaim their land, presently occupied by the military. Or did the people mention this, and SLU decided to ignore this? Even if SLU doesn’t want to support the struggle and aspiration of the Keppapulavu people, could they not clarify what their position is? SLU calls itself “non-political” and says “we do not endorse any decision made by any party in regard to this settlement”. Doesn’t their unwillingness to acknowledge the military occupation of Keppapulavu and lack of a principled (as opposed to a political party driven) position, make them aligned with political forces that made the decision to occupy the land of the people they claim they want to serve?
The story of Keppalulavu is not an isolated one – people of Mullikulam in the Mannar district have also been compelled to live in jungles due to their village being occupied by the Navy. I have known this community for several years and have admired their love for their village, land and way of life. I know of individuals and groups who have provided essential and urgent material needs in the absence of Government support, but without photographs or publicity. On the contrary, they have attempted to draw attention to the plight of the Mullikulam people, unable to access their homes due to the Navy’s occupation of their lands. I have also met many other people faced with the same situation as a result of the military occupation of their land – i.e. Iranathivu in the Kilinochchi district, Sampoor in the Trincomalee district and many others in the Jaffna district.
A parable of a stolen cycle
Charity to me is a positive thing, to be fostered. But it should be saved from being used as a tool to cover up land grabbing and other abuses – by perpetrators themselves or others.
I would also like to end with a story of a cycle I have heard from East Timor. Two boys were friends. One boy, the stronger and more powerful one, from an influential family, stole the cycle of the weaker boy. The boy owning the cycle did not complain nor fight. But the boys stopped talking to each other and the friendship ended. After some time, the boy who stole the cycle came around in the same cycle and told the owner of the cycle, “our friendship is more important than a cycle, so let us forget the cycle and be friends”. There was no mention or indication that he was going to return the cycle, apologize, make up for his actions in any way, or make a commitment never to act in that way again.
Will such a model of reconciliation work?

Sinhala military opens ‘holiday resorts’ in occupied Jaffna with ‘Kiribath Pongkal’

TamilNet[TamilNet, Monday, 14 January 2013, 21:12 GMT]
Amidst the beat of Sinhala drums and blessings of Sinhala-Buddhist monks, the SL military occupying Jaffna opened two new ‘holiday resorts’ on Sunday at Mayiliddi, and at Kaankeasan-thu’rai (KKS), which are under High Security Zone, along the northern coast of Jaffna. To mark the opening, an SL Military ‘Kiribath Pongkal’ was also conducted at the new buildings. While the housing and even shelters of the hundreds of thousands of Eezham Tamils affected by the genocidal onslaught of the Sinhala military is still a pressing question, the military opening and running ‘holiday resorts’ for its use shows that Sri Lanka is not making any pretensions of its colonial conquest and rule over Eezham Tamils in the model of European colonialists, civil society sources in Jaffna commented. 

SLA pongkal
[Image courtesy: army.lk]

The ‘holiday resorts’ are for the use of all ranks of the SL military and the military has made ‘good use’ of the abandoned and barren ‘state’ land given to it, claimed the website of the Sinhala Army occupying the country of Eezham Tamils.

SLA commander Lt Gen Jagath Jayasuriya “soon after the culmination of the humanitarian operations” [genocidal war] launched “a project to upgrade existing ones or construct new Army holiday resorts for all ranks since battlefield commitment hardly provided them with desired holiday spirit or opportunities, particularly in the company of their family members,” said the website of the Sri Lanka Army. 

The SLA commander along with the Jaffna SLA commander Maj Gen Hathurusinghe opened the occupying military's ‘holiday resorts’ on Sunday.

A Sinhala military city is fast developing along with the cantonment, harbour and airport at the HSZ including KKS and Palaali on the northern coast of Jaffna, observers in Jaffna said.

The ultimate culprits are not the Sinhala military, but the ones in some world Establishments, who want everyone to see what is happening in the North and East as not genocide and colonialism but ‘development and reconciliation.’ They knowingly experiment with the situation to prove what a genocidal military could achieve, civil society sources in Jaffna further commented.

SLA pongkal
[Image courtesy: army.lk]
SLA pongkal
[Image courtesy: army.lk]
SLA pongkal
[Image courtesy: army.lk]
SLA Pongkal
[Image courtesy: army.lk]


Video: ‘My Sons Need A Mom, Not A Heroine’ – Frederica Jansz

By Colombo Telegraph -January 15, 2013 
Colombo Telegraph“It was definitely a slow and steady slide into a stifling reporting that the government does not like. Since the end of the war in May 2009, there has been a very definite slide, a very definite take over, or state control, of all media outlets, and that includes independently, or privately owned media. The Sunday Leader actually is a classic example of what happened.” the former Sunday Leader editor Frederica Jansz told Aljazeera Listening Post.
In an interview with Aljazeera she said; “The level of intimidation, the harassment has continued, they have continued to call journalists traitors. Lawyers appearing for me, and the Sunday Leader, were termed, or called terrorists and traitors. And you know, in the back drop of all that had happened to me …. I was told, and I actually began to finally believe it, that my life was very seriously under threat. So yes, I made up my mind, I have young children, that my sons need a mum and not a heroine.”
Watch the full interview;

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Britain in talks with Lanka on floating armory

SriLankanNavy
Tuesday, January 15th, 2013
Britain is in talks with the Sri Lankan authorities to use a floating armory, the Guardian newspaper reported.
Avant Garde Maritime Services (AGMS), a Sri Lankan company that works in partnership with the country’s government, is one of the major operators of floating armouries. The company’s chairman, Nissanka Senadhipathi, said there were “thousands of weapons” on his company’s ships. AGMS charges US$25 a day to store the weapons and ammunition, with 800 to 1,000 movements on and off the armouries each month.
Sri Lanka has established itself as a leader on the armouries, which are partly run by the country’s navy and have been approved by Security Association for the Maritime Industry.
The British Foreign and Commonwealth office told The Guardian that they were “continuing discussions with interested parties, including the Sri Lankan authorities. We are determined to find a solution that allows British companies to compete for contracts in a fair and transparent manner that respects legitimate security considerations”.
About 20 ships stocked with assault rifles and other small arms as well as ammunition, body armour and night vision goggles are scattered around the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean, the EU naval force has confirmed.

Piracy fears over ships laden with weapons in international waters

Private security companies rely on unregulated 'floating armouries' in Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean
The GuardianThursday 10 January 2013 
An armed Somali pirate on the shores of Hobyo, Somalia. Photograph: Mohamed Dahir/AFP/Getty Images
Private security companies guarding ships against Somali pirates are increasingly storing their weapons on so-called "floating armouries" in international waters, to avoid arms smuggling laws when they dock in ports.
About 20 ships stocked with assault rifles and other small arms as well as ammunition, body armour and night vision goggles are scattered around the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean, the EU naval force has confirmed.
The legal status of these armouries is unclear, and industry experts are concerned that the absence of regulation leaves the armouries vulnerable to attack from the pirates they are intended to guard against.
Peter Cook, of the Security Association for the Maritime Industry, said that "some armouries are effective and some are not" and that the poorly run ones could be at risk of looting.
The presence of armed guards on board ships has helped dramatically reduce hijacks by Somali pirates, but raised problems of the legality of the arms used. Carrying weapons into a country can be considered arms smuggling, using weapons without licence, breaching an arms embargo (especially in Somalia) and other offences. Some countries that permit ships to enter port with armed guards may not allow them to leave with their weapons.
Before floating armouries were introduced, security companies either went through the costly and complicated process of using a handful of officially approved onshore armouries or got round the problem altogether by buying guns illegally in Yemen and dumping them at sea when going in to dock at a port. Now they are able to drop weapons off at the armoury and collect them again when heading back out to sea.
By using armouries private security companies are able to avoid the bureaucracy of local ports, save on port costs and not waste time deviating to ports to collect guards.
Avant Garde Maritime Services (AGMS), a Sri Lankan company that works in partnership with the country's government, is one of the major operators of floating armouries. The company's chairman, Nissanka Senadhipathi, said there were "thousands of weapons" on his company's ships. AGMS charges US$25 a day to store the weapons and ammunition, with 800 to 1,000 movements on and off the armouries each month.
Sri Lanka has established itself as a leader on the armouries, which are partly run by the country's navy and have been approved by Security Association for the Maritime Industry.
But there have been criticisms of some private "cowboy" operators. 
Nick Davis, of the British private military security company Maritime Guard Group, said that some floating armouries do not have proper storage for weapons, do not have enough watchmen and do not have enough space for their guards to sleep inside.
"The armouries run by Djibouti and Sri Lanka are very professional but some private operators are running death-traps", he said. He said that poorly run armouries were more likely to be attacked by pirates – thereby adding to a problem they are supposed to be stopping – or to be used as a way of storing or smuggling illegal weapons. There is also concern that the weapons could be commnadeered by terrorist groupes operating in the region.
Despite the dangers, many governments are continuing to ignore the problem. British security companies are not authorised to use them, although the government is considering whether to officially approve of the use of Sri Lankan armouries. The FCO told The Guardian that they were "continuing discussions with interested parties, including the Sri Lankan authorities. We are determined to find a solution that allows British companies to compete for contracts in a fair and transparent manner that respects legitimate security considerations".
Cook said that governments and the industry "can either embrace floating armouries, which will take us forward, or we can sit on the fence and allow circumstances to take control. If we put our heads in the sand it will push the operation of armouries underground and arms and ammunition will disappear all over the world".
The International Maritime Bureau said that in the first nine months of 2012, there had been 70 pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia, compared with 199 for the corresponding period in 2011. Insurance premiums are lower when armed guards are onboard – largely because of the presence of armed guards. But experts fear that unless the legal position of the floating armouries is resolved, the momentum against piracy would be lost. Peter Cook believes that if armouries are not approved the seas would once again be left "wide open for the pirates" and that there would, therefore, be a marked "increase in piracy".

This article first appeared on Africa Confidential