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

Saturday, January 19, 2013



The Times of India

Row in Lanka as govt turns Tamil killing fields into tourist hot spot
Mullivaikkal is the coastal village where the Tamil Tigers made their last stand in May 2009, along with more than 150,000 starving terrified Tamil civilians.

By Frances Harrison, TNN -Jan 19, 2013,
Local people who’ve recently travelled into Sri Lanka’s killing fields, where an estimated 40,000 people perished in 2009, say skulls and human bones have risen to the surface after this year’s flooding and abandoned belongings are strewn all over the landscape. “It is a horrible scene,” said one visitor, “there are still bunkers visible with saris, kid’s clothing and suitcases left open under the bushes; you can’t imagine what it must have been like for those people to have been crammed into that tiny place so close together”. This man was too scared to go close or collect the human remains lest there were mines or unexploded ordinance.
Mullivaikkal is the coastal village where theTamil Tigers made their last stand in May 2009, along with more than 150,000 starving terrified Tamil civilians. It’s synonymous with the worst suffering and slaughter of the decades long conflict - the Srebrenica of Sri Lanka. It’s here that war crimes and crimes against humanity were committed, according to UN experts.
The photographs show the last belongings of people who may well be dead now. By the time they reached this sandy spit of exposed land, some had already been displaced 40 times in five months. They’d shed almost everything they owned and expected to die. A Catholic priest writing to the Pope in the final days reported more than 3000 deaths and 4000 injuries in just one night: “It was a barrage of artillery, mortar, multi-barrel shelling and cluster bombs, which Sri Lankan government denies using on the civilians in the ‘no fire zone’.
The cries of woes and agony of the babies and children, the womenand the elderly fill the air polluted by poisonous and unhealthy gases and pierced the hearts of fathers and mothers, of elders and peasants, of old men and women of all walks of life”.
The priest disappeared without trace after being seen by many witnesses surrendering to the army.
For the last three and a half years, Mullivaikkal has been off limits - strictly controlled by the Sri Lankan military. Even today locals say there are large numbers of police and army personnel who operate in pairs on motorbikes stopping anyone straying from the main roads. Visitors say local residents are terrified to talk about politics to outsiders. Widows are particularly vulnerable to sexual abuse; some in isolated areas described being visited and questioned by male security officials.
Sri Lanka’s war zone area has partially opened up so survivors can return home, but also to enable a macabre tourist trail the military have set up primarily for people from the majority Sinhala community to see where their defeated enemy lived.
For decades these northern parts of the country under rebel administration were largely off limits to people in the South. Now busloads of Sri Lankan tourists are coming to see the rebel leader’s house and his underground bunker, swimming pool and shooting range. All the exhibits are neatly labeled - “Terrorist Swimming Pool” for example - and in the rebels’ erstwhile capital there’s even a souvenir shop next to the destroyed landmark of the water tower. Next to each of these sites, there is a cafe where visitors can enjoy a cup of tea prepared by a Sri Lankan soldier. In the official history there’s no word of the tens of thousands of civilians who died here - the majority as a result of a brutal government offensive that involved deliberately and repeatedly attacking hospitals, safe zones and food queues. And yet this is an area where almost every Tamil family lost someone in the 2009 war.
“The government has destroyed the childhood home of the rebel leader Prabhakaran, as well as rebels’ cemeteries, but has kept the Tiger bunkers and constructed war museums. Why? What kind of argument is being made here?” asks Amarnath Amarasingam, a post-doctoral fellow at York University in Toronto, Canada. “In a strange way, it amounts to a subtle building-up of the Tigers, a kind of glorification of the threat that they posed - openly on display at the war museum in Puthukkudiyiruppu. The government can then point to it and say, ‘look what we were able to destroy’ and, of course, ‘if we’re not careful, look what can re-emerge’”, he says.
Clearly this sort of triumphalist tourism does little to foster reconciliation between communities, nor does it do much to benefit the local economy. There’s a stark contrast between luxury tourist guest houses and the local living conditions nearly four years after the end of the war. In the war zone the tops of palm trees are now blackened stumps - an indication of the heavy fighting. Most buildings are said to have been destroyed, often razed to the ground. Visitors say most houses or huts along the coast are still without roofs - those that rebuilt them did so by borrowing or receiving money from relatives abroad. Some local families have been reduced to scavenging for scrap metal - often cooking pots or gold that people buried during the final phase of the war in the hope that they’d live to come back to reclaim their property.

The writer of this piece is the author of “Still Counting The Dead”- a collection of survivors’ stories from the final phase of the Sri Lankan civil war
Land confiscation activity increase in Kilinochch
Saturday , 19 January 2013
State and private lands in areas closer to Kilinochchi town, land impounding in an illegal manner incidents have increased was stated. Owners of many private lands near Kilinochchi town areas have gone abroad.
 
The lands which are in the care of the relations are grabbed by some who are in support of state ruling sector parties have augmented. Relations maintaining the lands and threatened is according to sources.
 
Similar two incidents have occurred recently at Kilinochchi Thondaman nagar village and Jayanthi nagar.
 
Other than this, the lands belonging to Irrigation department which are either side of the two main irrigation canals which flows water from Kilinochchi,  Iranaimadu tank to  Uruthirapuram, are impounded by those belong to political parties. Currently business centers are operating in these localities. 
 
The land allocated for Rathinapuram waste water drains are also confiscated. Such land confiscation incidents are augmented in Kilinochchi which is able to observe. 

SL military deployed ex-LTTE member, EPDP-journalist to frame Sritharan MP

[TamilNet, Friday, 18 January 2013, 23:41 GMT]
TamilNetA former LTTE member, known as Premraj Vasanthan, allegedly recruited by the SL military intelligence for covert operations in the post-Mu’l’livaaykkal times, had visited the office of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP Mr Sivagnanam Sritharan after a long time last Friday and was wandering around inside the office. On the following day, the SL “Terrorist” Investigation Department (TID) operatives raided the office of the TNA parliamentarian in Ki’linochchi, with Mr Vasanthan in their ‘custody’. The intelligence operative “located” explosives, while the SL military “discovered” pornography material and the EPDP journalist planted condoms in an apparent move to discredit and frame Mr Sritharan, who has been gaining public support from the people of Vanni. 

Leaflet against TNA MP Sritharan
Propaganda waged against Sritharan MP by SL military and EPDP elements in Ki'linochchi
Leaflet against TNA MP Sritharan
A leaflet distributed by SL military operatives against Sritharan MP in Ki'linochchi
In the meantime, TNA sources in Vanni told TamilNet that they had spotted Mr. Vasanthan freely roaming around in Ki’linochchi market area after the episode at the TNA office in Ki’linochchi. 

When the SL-TID operatives brought Vasanthan to Sritharan’s office last Saturday, he was in a handcuffed state. 

The TID, deploying a ‘counterinsurgency’ (COIN) styled operation, also used a journalist, who has been hired by the EPDP parliamentarian Mr Chandrakumar as his propaganda manager. 

The SL military intelligence has designed and distributed psyop leaflets among the people. 

However, the leaflets exposed the intention behind the SL action against the TNA parliamentarian. 

The leaflets blamed TNA MP Sritharan for having voiced against alleged sexual harassments of Tamil women conscripted by the SL military recently.

In the meantime, around 30 to 40 SL soldiers were deployed in a search operation to locate Mr Pon Kanthan, who was at the office of Sritharan MP. 

Mr Veazhamaalikithan, who was in charge of the office, is being detained at the Vavuniyaa office of the TID and is being interrogated.

Kanthan was earlier released after a brief interrogation at the office of the TNA MP last Saturday. 

With the ‘bomb’ episode at Sritharan MP's office in Ki'linochchi, the occupying SL military has sought to curb the political activities that were being carried out by the two activists who are close to the TNA MP. 

On Friday, while commenting to the questions raised, Mr CVK Sivagnanam, a veteran civil and political activist, who is also a joint secretary of Ilangkai Thamizh Arasuk Kadchi (ITAK) said that a legal initiative is under way to protect Mr Sritharan. 

Earlier, Mr Sritharan was telling media that he had been sidelined by the TNA hierarchy. 

TNA leaders R Sampanthan and Maavai Senathirajah are yet to raise their voice in support of Mr Sritharan, who is being harassed by the “Terrorist” investigation department of Colombo. 

There is a pattern in the modus operandi on who is protected and who is framed, political observers in the island said. 

The US-based former GTF President appreciating the political line of Mr Sumanthiran MP has been given with an appointment letter to become the advisor to the Sinhala colonial governor in the North. But, Sritharan MP is framed by the TID. 

The pattern makes many a Tamils to suspect that every act of Colombo, particularly the acts of Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, are actually designed and consented by an articulating ‘group’ from the outside engaged in engineering a particular agenda, and that is why Colombo confidently carries out all its operations, the observers further said.

Freedom in the World 2013

DEMOCRATIC BREAKTHROUGHS IN THE BALANCE

The emergence of popular movements for reform were the driving force behind major gains in the Middle East last year, according to Freedom in the World 2013, Freedom House’s annual report on the state of global freedom. However, a number of regions experienced setbacks due to a hardened and increasingly shrewd authoritarian response to these movements.
https://twimg0-a.akamaihd.net/profile_background_images/205450948/twitter_70.jpgWhile the number of countries ranked as Free in 2012 was 90, a gain of 3 over the previous year, 27 countries showed significant declines, compared with 16 that showed notable gains. This is the seventh consecutive year that Freedom in the World has shown more declines than gains worldwide. Furthermore, the report data reflected a stepped-up campaign of persecution by dictators that specifically targeted civil society organizations and independent media.
Among the most striking gains for freedom was that of Libya, which advanced from Not Free to Partly Free and registered one of the most substantial one-year numerical improvements in the report’s nearly 40-year history. Burma and a number of African countries, including Côte d’ivoire, Guinea, Lesotho, Senegal, and Sierra Leone, also saw major advances. Noteworthy declines were recorded for Kazakhstan, Kenya, Mali, Nigeria, Russia, Turkey, and Ukraine.
The Middle East showed ambiguous results for the year. In addition to major gains for Libya, and Tunisia’s retention of sharp improvements from 2011, Egypt experienced relatively modest progress. The country held a flawed but competitive presidential election and direct military rule came to an end, yet the elected parliament was dissolved and President Morsi pushed through a new constitution under deeply problematic circumstances.
Moreover, the gains for the Arab Spring countries triggered a reaction, sometimes violent, by authoritarian leaders elsewhere in the Middle East, with resulting setbacks for freedom in Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Syria, and the United Arab Emirates.
The report’s findings were especially grim for Eurasian countries. Russia took a decided turn for the worse after Vladimir Putin’s return to the presidency. Having already marginalized the formal political opposition, he enacted a series of laws meant to squelch a burgeoning societal opposition. The measures imposed severe new penalties on unauthorized demonstrations, restricted the ability of civic groups to raise funds and conduct their work, and placed new controls on the internet.
Citing an accentuation of repression in a number of critical countries, the report urges the United States and other democracies to demonstrate leadership in the struggle for freedom. It criticizes both the Obama administration and the Republican opposition for a reluctance to provide that leadership.

Key global findings:
The number of electoral democracies stood at 117, the same as for 2011. Two countries, Georgia and Libya, achieved electoral democracy status, while two were dropped from the category, Mali and the Maldives.
Four countries moved from Partly Free to Free: Lesotho, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Tonga. Three countries rose from Not Free to Partly Free: Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, and Libya. Mali fell two tiers, from Free to Not Free, and Guinea-Bissau dropped from Partly Free to Not Free.
Some notable trends highlighted in the report include increased Muslim-on-Muslim violence, which reaching horrifying levels in Pakistan and remained a serious problem in Iraq and elsewhere; a serious decline in civil liberties in Turkey; and among the Persian Gulf states, a steady and disturbing decline in democratic institutions and an increase in repressive policies.

Worst of the Worst: Of the 47 countries designated as Not Free, nine have been given the survey’s lowest possible rating of 7 for both political rights and civil liberties: Eritrea, Equatorial Guinea, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Two territories, Tibet and Western Sahara, were also ranked among the worst of the worst.
An additional 5 countries and 1 territory received scores that were slightly above those of the worst-ranked countries, with ratings of 6,7 or 7,6 for political rights and civil liberties: Belarus, Chad, China, Cuba, Laos, and South Ossetia.
Key regional findings:
Middle East and North Africa
In a region notable for sectarian polarization, civil strife, and repressive autocracies, freedom scored some grudging but nonetheless impressive gains in 2012. Gains:Tunisia maintained dramatic improvements from the previous year, and Libya and Egypt both moved from Not Free to Partly Free. Declines: Syria suffered by far the worst repercussions from the Arab Spring. Declines were also seen in Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates.
Sub-Saharan Africa
In recent years, sub-Saharan Africa has ranked as the world’s most politically volatile region, with major democratic breakthroughs in some countries, and coups, civil strife, and authoritarian crackdowns in others. While the region saw several significant gains, especially in West Africa, civil conflicts and the emergence of violent Islamist groups prevented an overall upgrade for political freedom. Gains: Three countries moved from Partly Free to Free: Lesotho, Sierra Leone, and Senegal. Côte d’Ivoire moved from Not Free to Partly Free. Guinea and Malawi also showed gains. Declines: Mali suffered one of the greatest single-year declines in the history ofFreedom in the World, dropping precipitously from Free to Not Free, and Guinea-Bissau’s status declined from Partly Free to Not Free. Declines were also seen in the Central African Republic, The Gambia, Kenya, Nigeria, Madagascar, South Africa, and Uganda.
Central and Eastern Europe/Eurasia
The return of Vladimir Putin to the Russian presidency ushered in a new period of accelerated repression. With Russia setting the tone, Eurasia (consisting of the countries of the former Soviet Union minus the Baltic states) now rivals the Middle East as one of the most repressive areas on the globe. Indeed, Eurasia is in many respects the world’s least free subregion, given the entrenchment of autocrats in most of its 12 countries. Gains: Improvements were seen in Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Georgia, as well as in the disputed territories of Abkhazia and Nagorno-Karabakh, the latter of which moved from Not Free to Partly Free.Declines: Kazakhstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Ukraine all had notable declines.
Asia-Pacific
For years ranked among the world’s most repressive regimes, Burma continued to push ahead with a process of democratic reform that was launched in 2010. While it remains a Not Free country, it registered improvements that brought it ahead of China in both its political rights and civil liberties ratings. Gains: Improvements were seen in Burma, Bhutan, Indian Kashmir, Mongolia, and Tonga. Declines: The most serious declines in the Asia-Pacific region for 2012 took place in the Maldives and Sri Lanka.
Americas
As the year ended, Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez was in a Cuban hospital attempting to recover from surgery for an undisclosed form of cancer. For over a decade, Chávez has been a significant figure in regional politics and has aspired, with less success, to a leading role on the global stage. His reelection in 2012 was ensured by the massive abuse of state resources. Gains: The region of the Americas saw no substantial improvements. Declines: Ecuador, Paraguay, and Suriname suffered notable declines.
Western Europe and North America
Although Western Europe and North America continue to grapple with the impact of the financial crisis and, in Europe, an increase in nationalist sentiment in response to an influx of immigrants, they have managed to weather these challenges without a serious weakening of their traditionally high level of respect for democratic standards and civil liberties. There were no major gains or declines in this region.


FREEDOM IN THE WORLD 2013 RELEASE MATERIALS

Note: The final versions of all Freedom in the World 2013 country reports will be posted as they become available.
Special working plans to protect Jaffna district in case of disaster. Disaster Management Center prepares

Saturday , 19 January 2013
Disaster Management Center Jaffna District Deputy Director S.Ravi said, working projects are designed to protect the Jaffna district from disaster in year 2020, in a protective and peaceful manner. 
A discussion was held at Nallur divisional secretariat conference hall yesterday amongst the disaster management sub-committees.
Disaster Management Center Director Major General Hamini Hettiarachchi, Jaffna district Government Agent Suntharam Arumainayagam, divisional secretaries, departments’ heads and many attended.
All the employees from the Disaster Management Center should join and work. These assignments cannot be processed independently by the Disaster Management Department. If everyone coordinate and function, we can expect success in   the disaster relief work.
120 million rupees finance has been allocated to the Jaffna district for year 2012 to 2014.  33 million rupees finance was allocated for last year from this allocation.
50 million rupees finance is allocated for this year was said by Director General Major Hamini Hettiarachchi.
 Jaffna district Deputy Director S.Ravi in his statement said, working plans are prepared to transform Jaffna district as protective and peaceful in year 2020. The target can be achieved with everyone's coordination. 
Intellectuals from the Jaffna district were invited for a seminar concerning disaster management.
We would identify the positive working plans suitable to our region and accordingly activities will be processed. 
We have introduced disaster management volunteers in 30 schools out of 473 schools located in the Jaffna district. This year, we would introduce to other schools.
 Further we have prepared disaster protective plan to all schools. Flood relief activities will be processed this year was mentioned by him.

 A person from the majority community had been appointed as the responsible officer to the Jaffna district secretariat Information Department.
In year 2004,  the Information Department office was launched by the Media Ministry at the Jaffna district secretariat. However none was appointed as officer in charge.
In year 2011, July month, in view of the local council election, two officials were appointed temporarily to the Information Department. Officers from the Muslim and Sinhala communities were appointed, but they returned to Colombo on conclusion of the elections.
After their return, substitutes were not appointed and the Information Department activities got halted. In this state, last Tuesday, a Sinhala officer had been appointed to the Information Department.
Jaffna being the district consisting of Tamil speaking people as majority, but Sinhala officials is continuously appointed.
In the beginning of this year, two Sinhala officials were appointed to the Jaffna district secretariat Motor Transport Department and in this state currently a Sinhala official is appointed to the Information Department.

HIGH-LEVEL US DELEGATION TO ARRIVE IN SRI LANKA

(Left) Deputy Assistant Secretary of State James R. Moore, (Center) Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Jane B. 
Zimmerman and (Right) Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Vikram J. Singh
High-level US delegation to arrive in Sri Lanka



January 19, 2013 

A high-level delegation from the United States, comparing three US Deputy Assistant Secretaries, are set to arrive in the island next week on an official visit, aimed at discussing various issues such as the implementation of the LLRC recommendations and National Action Plan.


“Deputy Assistant Secretary of State James Moore, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Vikram Singh, and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Jane Zimmerman will travel to Sri Lanka and Maldives from January 26-February 1,” the US Embassy in Colombo said in a release today.

They are scheduled to meet with senior Sri Lankan officials, members of various political parties as well as civil society to discuss a wide range of issues, including progress in implementing the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission recommendations and National Action Plan, it said.  

The former Deputy Chief of Mission of the U.S. Embassy in Colombo (2006 – 2009), James R. Moore is the current Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs.

Jane B. Zimmerman is a Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, responsible for South and Central Asia, the Western Hemisphere, and International Religious Freedom.

Vikram J. Singh is Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for South and Southeast Asia within the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs.  Mr. Singh serves as the principal advisor to senior leadership within the Department of Defense for all policy matters pertaining to development and implementation of defense strategies and plans for the region. 
Eccentric MaRa courts disaster via his mad courts- a foreign ship leaves ignoring court orders

http://www.lankaenews.com/English/images/logo.jpg(Lanka-e-News -18.Jan.2013, 11.30PM) With the world beginning to treat the new Chief justice (CJ) of SL as an unlawful CJ , the foreign countries are rejecting the judgments delivered by the SL courts in regard to international transactions. This was well illustrated when an Iranian ship ignored the SL court verdict. As this Iranian vessel MV Ameena had defaulted payment to a German Bank., the latter on an order secured from the SL court had kept this vessel detained within the SL territorial waters.

Following the exposure that the world’s highest judicial body does not recognize the SL’s unlawful chief justice (CJ) , and that in SL there exists no independent judiciary , this Vessel in question had ignored the court order and started its journey out of the SL waters. When the vessel was moving taking no notice of the SL Navy orders , and journeying, the Navy had finally ordered to stop when it was just close to the SL territorial waters boundary. The captain in the ship had then replied that the SL courts are not world recognized , and they are therefore not bound to adhere to the court verdict.

The media spokesman for the Navy, Kosala Warnakulasooriya said , by now the relevant vessel had traveled nearly 12 nautical miles , and has entered the international territorial waters , and hence no action can be taken against it except under the regulations of the UN.

Meanwhile , the US High Commissioner in SL , Ms. Michelle Seeson issued a stern and ominous statement yesterday. It is no secret that foreign investors who wish to invest in SL must first assess the independence of the judiciary , she said. The impeachment motion of MaRa (who has now gone stark mad) against the CJ , Dr . Shiranee Bandaranayake had gravely jeopardized the independence of the judiciary of SL., whereby attracting foreign investors into this country has now become a major issue.





India’s blunder on Eezham Tamils brings in domino effect in Indian Ocean

[TamilNet, Saturday, 19 January 2013, 02:24 GMT]
TamilNetThe historic blunder committed by New Delhi in not boldly checking the genocidal State and regime in Colombo, and New Delhi’s continued complicity in the genocide of Eezham Tamils –all said to be due to a competition with China in wooing the criminal State– have seriously eroded all credibility of India in the neighbourhood, and one by one all the small Indian Ocean countries have started playing the game of Colombo, political analysts in Jaffna said, citing the recent developments in the Maldives, Seychelles and Mauritius. Indian analysts and sections of India’s so-called national media that see only the money of China playing the culprit, fail to see India’s loss of credibility being the fundamental reason. Only a bold Indian action on genocidal Sri Lanka could course-correct all the others in the region, the Jaffna analysts said. 

Writing in The Daily Star of Bangladesh on Saturday, Indian origin analyst Harsh V. Pant, teaching at the Department of Defence Studies of the King’s College, London, said: “China's rising profile in South Asia and the Indian Ocean region isn't news. What's significant is the diminishing role of India and the rapidity with which New Delhi has ceded strategic space to Beijing in regions traditionally considered India's periphery.”

“This quiet assertion of China has allowed various smaller countries to play China off against India. Most states in the region now use the China card to balance against India's predominance,” the defence analyst said.

Touching on China expanding military and naval cooperation with Seychelles and the possibilities of Mauritius succumbing to the lure of Chinese money, Harsh Pant was particularly elaborating on Maldives cancelling the airport agreement with the Indian corporate GMR.

The writer also cited the visit of the Maldivian defence minister to China two days after the cancellation, New Delhi’s hints on external forces operating behind the cancellation and some local Maldivians reacting that the airport contract be rather given to friends in China.

What the writer didn’t say is the folly of New Delhi that encouraged the Maldives to couple itself with the Rajapaksa regime in the genocidal war and its aftermath, which is now boomeranging.

The Indian writer also doesn’t see that the GMR failure of India in the Maldives was largely due to encroachment into the interests of local businessmen, arrogant handling by Indian diplomats and lack of understanding in New Delhi about the closely-knit society of the island nation, where not necessarily a businessman but even an ordinary fisherman is closely related to the politically top-most in the country.

It was a rare event in the Maldives that nearly 6000 copies of a book written in Dhivehi language on the GMR issue was sold within the country of just 3,20,000 people. Those who view the issue from New Delhi and London should translate and read the booklet to understand the local sentiments, commented media sources in Malé.

Harsh Pant, a former JNU student, is completely unrealistic in implying that Tamil Nadu is the problem for India in competing with China and in reaching out Sri Lanka, commented a political analyst of the University of Jaffna.

“At a time when domestic political constraints have made it difficult for New Delhi to reach out to Colombo, Beijing has been quick to fill that vacuum,” wrote the Indian origin defence studies lecturer in London.

A similar psyop campaign, addressed to policy planners in India and targeting the people of Tamil Nadu, has recently come from two defence related US academics too – a Harvard researcher and a US Naval War College professor.

“Hence the domestic political complications imposed on New Delhi by the Tamil Nadu political faction is heightening the likelihood that Chinese warships will be visiting or based in southern Sri Lanka in the near future,” the US writers have said in a December article of the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

Sections of Indian intelligence bigwigs also hold the same view, The Hindu’s former editor N. Ram favours supporting the ‘strongest ever president’ of Sri Lanka and Commonwealth Secretary General Kamalesh Sharma is working behind the scene in handing over the Commonwealth portfolio of human rights and affairs of the small nations into the hands of Sri Lanka, informed sources cite.

Harsh Pant quoted the new Indian External Affairs Minister, Salman Khurshid suggesting that India must accept “the new reality” of China's presence in areas it considers exclusive.

This is a seeming acknowledgement of Chinese presence rapidly shaping South Asia and Indian Ocean regions, Pant said.

Mr. Khurshid’s two predecessors have cut an extremely poor image in handling genocidal Sri Lanka– the core issue of India’s China concerns, which the Indians don’t want to admit.

One of Khurshid’s predecessors, Mr. Pranab Mukherjee made even indictable blunders in dealing with numbers at the time of the genocidal war. The presence of mind of the other predecessor Mr. S.M. Krishna to the portfolio he was handling got internationally exposed at the UN in February 2011, to the embarrassment of all Indians. 

Not only peoples of India, but also peoples of entire South Asia and the region of Indian Ocean affected by India’s foreign policy blunders have a right to know who actually handles India’s foreign policy, political analysts in Jaffna said.

If citing China for the continued appeasement with genocidal Sri Lanka –the criminal paradigm setter in the region– and at the same time facilitating all avenues of entry for China into the region is going to continue with New Delhi’s policy makers, then it shouldn’t be a problem at all for them to compromise with seeing all Tamils following the Maldives, Seychelles and Mauritius, the Jaffna analysts further said.

Won’t accept help from killers of my daughter: Rizana’s mother

FRIDAY, 18 JANUARY 2013
“I am not willing to accept any assistance from the state of Saudi Arabia or any individual of this country who killed my daughter,” Rizana’s mother has said.

“Several institutes and individuals have offered to help me to provide house but I strongly ask those who are linked with the murder of my daughter not to come with gifts to us. Everything has happened according to the God’s wishes,” she said.

She also appealed not to disgrace her daughter by publishing wrong photographs as that of Rizana’s, as some media have done.(Amadoru Amarajeewa)

Special Feature: A Spark of Unity for Sri Lanka?

Jan-17-2013http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg
Tim King asks activists, writers, and a Member of Sri Lanka’s Parliament, if the widespread support for a Muslim maid in Saudi Arabia eased other tensions.
Rizana Nafeek's passport
Rizana Nafeek’s passport. Courtesy: groundviews.org
(SACRAMENTO, CA) - I frequently joke about how an alien invasion from outer space would bring the human race together onto the same page very quickly. I hope the united struggle that ultimate failed to save Rizana Nafeek, but seemingly put all Sri Lankans onto one page, can lead to a microcosm of that idea taking place on the island nation.

Many people tried…
Most people who pay attention to national news, know that Rizana Nafeek, a Sri Lankan woman employed as a maid in Saudi Arabia, was beheaded over the death of an infant she is accused of killing.
The young woman had no past behavior indicating she was dangerous, and she and her advocates maintained to the very end that she had no direct involvement in the baby’s death.
But good luck selling that one in Saudi Arabia, a U.S. ally that enforces Sharia Law which makes all women second-class citizens, and that is putting it mildly. It means, among other things, that the word of a female maid, a foreigner at that, has little weight or value against a member of a wealthy Saudi family.

In Sri Lanka, bitter tensions between minority ethnic Tamils and Sinhala Buddhists simmer in the wake of the country’s terrible civil war that ended in 2009 with tens of thousands of Tamils mass murdered by their own government.
Rajasingham Jayadevan, a well known Tamil activist in London, shared his thoughts on the government’s role as the hopeful yet failed savior of Rizana Nafeek. Ultimately, the young maid was a Tamil, but also being Muslim made her even more unique as a Sri Lankan, and that likely played a part in her demise. “You can say that the government showed lack of interest because she is a Muslim. If it was a Sinhala Buddhist Wimal Weerawanse likes would have gone on the fast in front of the Saudi Embassy. Saffron robed ball heads would have gone to town on the issue.” He cites that there are no protests or outcries over Nafeek’s death, and even the Muslim leaders associated with the government are playing ball.
A drastic need for unity, mutual respect and peace is sorely lacking. The Muslims of Sri Lanka are an even smaller minority living amongst the minority Tamil and majority Sinhalese populations.
Taking it a step farther, even if she did kill the baby, she did not deserve this spectacle of a death. Have you seen it by the way? You might as well put yourself through it to fully appreciate the impact. It isn’t too bad, the camera records the image from a distance and about the only thing you see is the swing of the sword and the actual beheading at the end. Last year we published video of drug cartels in Mexico using a chainsaw to remove the heads of two men. This isn’t anything close to that.

But is it one country? The whole civil war hinges around the fact that Tamils claimed a large section of the north coastal region as the breakaway state of Tamil Eelam. Today it is an occupational zone where Sri Lankan soldiers are stationed in large numbers. But politically and definitely militarily, and certainly occupationally, it is one country today.
Sri Lanka, land of a recent tsunami, that preceded the tragic Tamil Genocide, and the defeat of the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) Tamil Tigers themselves, who literally terrorized the Sri Lankan military and then fought to the very end.
The point though is that the war did end and while a strong desire to repopulate Tamil Eelam exists, and Sri Lanka is accused of endless war crimes, each day still comes and goes and the population should take this example of the beheading of the young girl, and consider how the government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) did take steps to save her, unsuccessfully of course.

So what do Tamil activists and writers think about the idea of an event like this tragic beheading, in relation to building unity in Sri Lanka? I asked Visvanathan Sivam to explain how the girl’s Muslim heritage relates to that of the Tamils, who are primarily Hindu, followed by Christians.
“The maid is a Tamil Muslim. The Muslims who live in the North-east are Tamils, but like the Muslims elsewhere, they consider themselves Muslims first and Tamils last. The same as the Muslims in UK - they are Muslims first and English last; nothing on earth can change them,” Sivam said.
I asked if it seemed possible, from a Tamil perspective, to see any hope emerging from this brief bout of common support from all Sri Lankans, to hear once again that, “nothing on earth will bring the Tamils and Sinhalese together”. Sivam says the Sinhalese government is all out to reduce the Tamils to an absolute minority in their own homeland. As for the Muslim woman who was killed in Saudi Arabia, Visvanathan Sivam says the government has to make some noise to please the Muslims, but that after some time, everything will go back to square one.
“To be frank with you I don’t have any hope of any solution in Sri Lanka, as the government has no will to find one. We just go on doing our work and leave the rest to destiny,” Sivan added.

Brisbane human rights activist Brian Senewiratne pictured
with South Africa’s Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Brisbane Times
I turned to the most well known and accomplished Sinhala activist for Sri Lankan Tamils, Dr. Brian Senewiratne, in Melbourne, Australia, to get a sense of what he thought. “As for Unity in Sri Lanka,” he said, “It’s too late for that. Beheading or no beheading, Sri Lanka cannot be one country. It is not ‘if’ but ‘when’ that separation will occur”.
Strike one, as we say here in the land of baseball. I had to smile when reading Dr. Senewiratne’s first sentence, “Tim… I have no idea why you think that the well-known barbarians in Saudi Arabia (and several other countries like Singapore) will lead to unity in Sri Lanka.
Dr. Senewiratne was raised in a Buddhist culture and both Hindus and Buddhists believe in not killing any living thing. Now they don’t all follow that, just as members of all other religions seem to have their violent side and inability to follow religious teachings, but the good doctor males clear how little use he has for the violent Wahhabi culture of U.S. ally Saudi Arabia.
“Death by hanging, beheading, stoning or any other is more a reflection of barbarism – a return to a barbaric past. As a member of Amnesty International from day 1 (1961) when Amnesty was launched in Trafalgar Sq (I was a newly qualified doctor who was working a couple of tube-train stops away), I have been totally against capital punishment. I have seen more than one person executed only to find several years later that someone else was responsible”.

When asked whether he believes the Sri Lankan government has what it takes to dare to challenge the Saudi government, he replied, “No, it has too much oil – to hell with human rights”.
A Tamil advocate who is always helpful to my reporting efforts, Sandy Vadi, points to an article written by Fil Munas in September, titled ‘Shed a tear for Rizana’ “…bringing communities together is not possible with the current regime and its loyal bunch. Some of them including Rajiva Wijesinha, Minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara (at) one time aroused vast expectations among youth and students and spoke widely about Tamil autonomy, equality and self-determination few decades ago”.
countercurrents.org/munas300912.htm
Vadi recently sent photo of posters in Colombo printed only in Sinhala accusing TNA, Chief Justice as Tamil Tiger traitors trying to destabilize the country. “This kind of language in ‘communal lines’ has been there for six decades for political purposes and now it is sold very well to poor Sinhalese population”.

Rajiva Wijesinha
This activist references Rajiva Wijesinha, a member of the Sri Lankan parliament and presidential advisor, who was also the former head of the Sri Lankan peace secretariat and the secretariat to the ministry of human rights.
I wanted to gauge Wijesinha’s thoughts on this development, so I asked him whether this type of event bolsters the unity of all Sri Lankans. He cited my statement to him, “Surprise has been expressed with regard to the execution of Rizana that all sides came out in favor of saving the girl, Sri Lankan Muslims, Tamils, and plenty of Sinhalese,” saying:
“I found such surprise strange, but realize that understanding of the actual situation in Sri Lanka has been distorted by not just the years of conflict but by the presentation of Sri Lanka by expatriates”. He rarely misses an opportunity to downplay the turbulent relations in Sri Lanka, and was no exception in this case.
“Within Sri Lanka there are hardly any animosities based on race itself, and most Sri Lankans treat people of other communities simply as human beings”.
He does not deny that there are resentments based on what he calls “perceptions of discrimination” and instances of violence, and this in turn has led to resentment of what he refers to as “terrorist activity”.

“Tamils have felt oppressed by a majoritarian political dispensation that they felt hijacked the state, and this can translate into the feeling that Sinhalese have supported such a dispensation, but this hardly ever precludes willingness to interact positively with individuals”.
Wijesinha says the situation is different abroad, where memories of discrimination, and of three outbreaks of violence, have fuelled deep bitterness.
“This is exacerbated by reportage that concentrates on negatives – just as on a smaller scale some Sinhalese expatriates are conscious only of terrorist activity. Appetites that feed on themselves will not be able to see the suffering of individuals like Rizana objectively. Within Sri Lanka however we continue to interact, in schools, in offices and in commercial life without registering or bothering about the race to which those we interact with belong”.
Noel Vethanayagam in Chennai, suggests an excellent article for those seeking to further understand the situation, written by Tisaranee Gunasekera in Sri Lanka in The Guardian dated Tuesday, 15th January 2013. The title of the article is ‘Rizana Nafik, Bandaranayake and the Lankan Reality’. Vethanayagam commented on the government’s involvement in the series of attempts to save the girl’s life.
“As to what I think of the issue, the Govt was not sincere, they would not even pay the fees of the lawyer who was to defend this poor girl. As you know remittances of these poor workers bring the second most foreign exchange to Sri Lanka next to tourism. The Govt was not genuine because of the fear that any action would result in the loss of foreign exchange”.
He points to the fact that the agency which recruited her to work as a nanny did so knowing she was under-aged. In fact according to reports, the agency falsified her passport in order to send her to Saudi Arabia. “The Govt did not even bother to bring her body back to SL as this will create tension in the Muslim community in Sri Lanka.” The sadness of Rizana Nafeek’s mother has drawn a great deal of attention in Sri Lanka. Her family hoped for several years that they would see their daughter again, alive.
Read Full Article
Health unit processed activities to obliterate dengue mosquitos from Vavuniya Tamil School.

Saturday , 19 January 2013
Reports states dengue mosquitos were perceptible from a classroom in the Vavuniya School was destroyed by the Health unit.
Health unit officials were made aware about dengue mosquitos noticeable in the classrooms at Vavuniya Tamil Vidyalayam on last 15th, hence they were in the activities of destroying it by spraying smoke. Students were sent out of the classrooms at 8.30 a.m and for one and half hours the entire school compound was sprayed with smoke. Students cleared the rubbish accumulated in the locality.
 Dengue diseases influence was for the past some months was intensified in the Vavuniya district, hence the Health Department and urban council were engaged actively in dengue prevention activities
A three years old girl from Thekkawathai Aladi locality, Vavuniya was affected be dengue sickness, died on last 5th and after this incident, dengue prevention activities are intensified.
Dengue prevention activities are carried out in villages, departments and school compounds. It is much observable of dengue mosquitos breading in drainage systems where water is getting stagnated.  Mainly the villages closer to the tanks near Vavuniya town, where water is stagnated without getting gushed, dengue mosquitos breading is observable.
Health unit officials inform, if the stagnated water is disposed, dengue mosquitos breading could be prevented.
Yankee Gota is now anti US: US can’t do anything – we have China

http://www.lankaenews.com/English/images/logo.jpg(Lanka-e-News -18.Jan.2013, 11.30PM) SL defense secretary Gotabaya Rajapakse had stated , the only thing the US can do against us is to stop providing the defense training course. Gota made this comment at the SL petroleum Committee function today .

The biggest threat the US can hold out to us is to withdraw this training because since long ago they have not given us arms. If they don’t provide the training course , China will provide any number of training courses to us. I can send officers to China. Gota made these statements with arrogance and confidence. The US always takes wrong decisions based on wrong reasons against us, he added.

The curious part of this is , these are words escaping the mouth of none other than Gota who was a ‘yankee’ himself some years ago after fleeing SL in fear of the war. When he was there he crowed ‘yankee doodle do’ . After returning he is saying any donkey can do what Americans do ( which includes himself who is a citizen of America)

Referring to the statement of the US High Commissioner (HC), Michelle Seeson made yesterday , he said the HC had found fault with the manner in which the impeachment process was carried out. Every time she meets me , what she asks is ‘ ‘why don’t you punish the officers of the Forces?’ On those occasions I tell her, there must be a method to punish them.’ Gota observed.

What the US High Commissioner in SL , Ms. Michelle Seeson said in the communiqué issued yesterday by her was :
It is no secret that foreign investors who wish to invest in SL must first assess the independence of the judiciary , she said. The impeachment motion of MaRa (who has now gone stark mad) against the CJ , Dr . Shiranee Bandaranayake had gravely jeopardized the independence of the judiciary of SL., whereby attracting foreign investors into this country has now become a major issue.