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

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Sri Lanka: Move Commonwealth Summit

“The Sri Lankan government’s blatant disregard for the Commonwealth’s principles of human rights and democratic reform makes it a poor host for this important event. Unless the government urgently addresses abuses and ends impunity, the international recognition it will gain by hosting the Commonwealth summit while repressing its key values will be an embarrassment to the Commonwealth and its member countries.”
Brad Adams, Asia director
Colombo Venue Undeserved without Progress on Rights, Accountability
 FEBRUARY 6, 2013
HRW(New York) – The Commonwealth should shift the venue of its November 2013 Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) from Sri Lanka unless its government makes prompt, measurable, and meaningful progress on human rights, Human Rights Watch said today in a public letter to Commonwealth Heads of Government. Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma is scheduled to visit Sri Lanka on February 10, 2013 to discuss the upcoming meeting.
The Sri Lankan government under President Mahinda Rajapaksa has taken no meaningful steps to address serious abuses by government forces in the final months of the armed conflict with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009, during which the United Nations has estimated that up to 40,000 civilians died. Since 2009 the government has been responsible for a worsening human rights situation that includes clampdowns on basic freedoms, attacks and threats against civil society, and actions against the judiciary and other institutions, imperiling Sri Lanka’s democracy.
“The Sri Lankan government’s blatant disregard for the Commonwealth’s principles of human rights and democratic reform makes it a poor host for this important event,” said Brad Adams, Asia director. “Unless the government urgently addresses abuses and ends impunity, the international recognition it will gain by hosting the Commonwealth summit while repressing its key values will be an embarrassment to the Commonwealth and its member countries.”
In 2011, Human Rights Watch and other domestic and international human rights groups urged the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group to impose the following benchmarks as a precondition for allowing Sri Lanka to be the host of the 2013 summit. These benchmarks remain relevant today and include:
·         Ensuring meaningful domestic implementation of the international human rights treaties to which the government of Sri Lanka is party and bringing all legislation into line with international human rights standards;
·         Providing guarantees that all Sri Lankan people will be treated with dignity and respect as equal citizens and live in an environment in which they can enjoy all fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution of Sri Lanka;
  • Restoring constitutional provisions that guarantee separation of powers and reinstating the independence of the three branches of government;
  • Restoring the independence of key government institutions, such as the National Human Rights Commission;
  • Instituting effective mechanisms to protect journalists, civil society groups and human rights defenders who work for the promotion and protection of human rights;
  • Supporting and cooperating with independent and credible domestic and international investigations into all allegations concerning violations of international humanitarian and human rights law in the country, especially related to the conduct of the conflict which ended in 2009; and
  • Making a commitment to collaborate with the Office of the UN Secretary-General to initiate the implementation of the recommendations set out in the report of the secretary-general’s Panel of Experts.
Human Rights Watch is also deeply concerned that in addition to hosting the 2013 Commonwealth summit, Sri Lanka will hold the chairmanship of the Commonwealth from 2013 to 2015.
“A summit in Sri Lanka will cast serious doubt on the Commonwealth’s commitment to supporting human rights, democratic reform, and fundamental human rights enshrined in the Commonwealth Harare Declaration of 1991,” Adams said. “Handing Sri Lanka leadership of the Commonwealth at a time when democratic institutions are under direct and sustained attack by the Sri Lankan government will be an affront to the victims of rights violations in the country and around the Commonwealth.”
The Bill Gates Fantasy
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Does Bill Gates deserve his fortune? Do the Walton offspring deserve to be billionaires? Do the children living in poverty in the ghetto deserve to grow up poor?
William Henry "Bill" Gates III
With all his billions, you'd think he could afford a decent haircut.
(CALGARY, Alberta) - There are two main ways to become really rich. The first involves luck—e.g. win a big lottery. The second involves being born on third base (and growing up believing you hit a triple)…hmmm…also luck. Is this a contradiction? Let us explore further.
The richest person in the world today, outside of middle-eastern autocrats, is William Henry "Bill" Gates III, with a net worth in the ethereal neighborhood of $66,000,000,000 ($66 billion). If he were to spend $1 million a day, it would take him 180 years to spend it all. (Actually, this would only be the case if he kept the money underneath an oversized mattress so that it did not continue to increase through interest or stock growth as he was spending it.)
Question: Did Bill Gates actually earn any of this fortune or was it just luck on his part? Let us find out.
From the colonial era forward all successful American businessmen came from privileged backgrounds. There was one exceptional period, the 1850s. As sociologist C. Wright Mills observed: "The best time during the history of the United States for the poor boy ambitious for high business success to have been born was around the year 1835."
Historians have compiled a list of the 75 richest individuals in history, going all the way back to Cleopatra. One incredible fact about the list is that fourteen of those (20%) were Americans, born within nine years of each other in the mid-nineteenth century.
  • George Pullman, 1831
  • James G. Fair, 1831
  • Philip Danforth Armour, 1832
  • Peter Arrell Brown Widener, 1834
  • Fredrick Weyerhaeuser, 1834
  • Marshall Field, 1834
  • Hetty Green, 1834
  • Andrew Carnegie, 1835
  • Jay Gould, 1836
  • J. P. Morgan, 1837
  • John D. Rockefeller, 1839
  • Oliver H. Payne, 1839
  • George F. Baker, 1840
  • Henry H. Rogers, 1840
This anomalous event occurred because in the last third of the 19th century, American society had began a major transformation. Railroads were being built, oil was being discovered and mining expanded apace; Wall Street was emerging and industrial manufacturing began in earnest. All the rules from the old economy were being broken and remade. The list above is of men (except Green) who were in their twenties and thirties when the Civil War ended. Born a decade before or after 1835, and they were too young or too old (mentally) to take advantage of the economically unique, expanding opportunities.
If we jump ahead to the last quarter of the twentieth century, we find the same process occurring again.
January 1975 is recognized as the beginning of the microcomputer revolution: The Altair 8800 was offered to hobbyists and a few, like Bill Gates and Paul Allen (co-founders of Microsoft) jumped on it like a lion encountering a wandering stray antelope.
It was, like the 1850s—a matter of being psychologically ready or not. As long-time senior Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold said
"If you’re too old in 1975 then you’d already have a job at IBM out of college, and once people started at IBM, they had a real hard time making the transition to the new world. You had this multibillion dollar business making mainframes, and if you were part of that, you’d think, Why screw around with these little pathetic computers? That was the computer industry to those people, and it had nothing to do with this new revolution. They were blinded by that being the only vision of computing. They made a nice living. It’s just that there was no opportunity to become a zillionaire and make an impact on the world."
Anyone more than a few years out of college by 1975 was already part of the old paradigm. An equivalent computer-people date of birth list:            Read Full Article

Australian Deputy Opposition Leader Julie Bishop MP's Joint Press Conference
[ Thursday, 07 February 2013, 02:53.54 PM GMT +05:30 ]
The Australian parliamentary delegation led by the Australian Deputy Opposition Leader Julie Bishop visited the Island during the end of January addressed media briefing in Australia.
During my Lankan visit I was accompanied by the shadow Immigration Minister Scott Morrison and border protection spokesman Michael Keenan.

She noted purpose of the visit is on saying condition of the grounds, meeting with wide range of people, determining whether policy direction of SriLanka. The visit was organized in three parts. First part was organized by the TNA. They encouraged us to meet people.

Bishop noted SriLanka is emerging from bloody conflict of 30 years civil war. LTTE is a terrorist prescribe terrorist organization in number of places around the world. They were defeated by Lankan army three years ago. LTTE is a terrorist organization which own Naval and Air force and essentially occupied in the Northern SriLanka. Thousands of people were displaced from this war.
Commenting on the reconciliation process she added SriLanka need to go for a long process. TNA leaders currently engage tour in South Africa to hold discussion with IANC on holding reconciliation process under way in the country.
According to Bishop Majority of displaced people have return back to their home land. People displaced due to establishment of military camps in the north have not returned to their home land. They were provided with lands and temporary sheds due to pending decision on withdrawing military from the North.
Rehabilitation process is underway in the country. We visited land mine site. Number of women involved in the de-mining activities. We received opportunity to speak to these women. Numbers of them are former LTTE combatants. I spoke to a Tamil woman she was member of sea tigers. While in the LTTE she served has carder who sends explosives in small boats to attack Lankan navy. She is now employing in the landmine evacuation. They all were paid well. With the money she save s start up small business in their home land, Tamils are enterprising and hard working people, Opposition leader said.

An Era Of Confused Symbolisms

Colombo TelegraphBy Ravi Perera -February 7, 2013 
Ravi Perera
That we Sri Lankans are given to   heavy symbolism    is a fact that none can deny. From the obligatory lighting of an oil lamp to symbolize the illumination of the dark ( although a modern electric bulb would give much more light)  at almost every function including even sporting events  to the politicians dress of choice, so called national dress, a  sparkling white kurta top and a sarong  to symbolize the purity of a life of service.  This dress of the politicians is also said to represent his identification with the masses. Looking around at public gatherings we realize that this idea of the common dress may well be a fiction. The truth seems to be that the common man’s dress is only worn by uncommon people. In recent times we can think of the likes of SWRD BandaranaikeJR JayawardenaR PremadasaGamini Dissanayake andMahinda Rajapaksa as those who chose to wear this dress, particularly on public occasions. As long as the fiction of that symbol is believed in, it does not matter that hardly anybody else wears such clothes.
But the symbolisms   prevalent in our public/social life are not based on “truths”. The legitimacy of the symbols does not come from its approximation to reality. They only seem to represent social attitudes and sensibilities which find acceptance among a certain way of looking at things. So in the middle of a bright tropical day we will light a lamp, not to dispel the darkness without, but as would inevitably be   argued to dispel the “darkness within” those gathered there.
Of course, some of our symbolic gestures are just play acting .For example say China gifts one hundred tractors to Sri Lanka. We will invariably organize a ‘handing over” ceremony at which the Minister in charge will drive a tractor for a short distance, as if confirming our grasp of the purpose for which the machine was built. This symbolic drive by the Minister does not mean that our agriculture productivity per acre is going to improve. Even the enactors of the symbolic gestures are not thinking that far. It is the gesture that satisfies them. In almost every public or private function here many such symbolic acts are performed. At certain functions we see fresh milk boiled to overflow, again finding a symbol between the reaction of the substance to heat and a wished for prosperity. Despite decades of effort we are yet to find a method of achieving self sufficiency in the dairy industry.
As expected, the 65 anniversary of our independence from the British was celebrated in Trincomalee, the famed port town on the east coast of Sri Lanka, with the accustomed pomp and pageantry. Undoubtedly much thought was given to the significance of the place and manner of the celebration. Before 2009, when theLTTE was vanquished finally, it would have been unthinkable to stage such a function in that part of the country, which was then deep enemy territory. What was impossible only three years back, has become a reality which can be appreciated both as a living experience as well as symbolically. Future historians may well mark these years as a high point in the nation’s tumultuous post independence evolution.
In Trincomalee too, as has been the practice in recent years, a good amount of the symbolism was around the military, in the display of men and hardware of war. Given the fact that the defeating   of the terrorist group LTTE was only achieved by overpowering them in the battlefield there is justification for it. With such an intransigent enemy it was inevitable that finally the only option was a military solution .The stubbornness of the challenger forced a solution which was extremely costly in terms of both lives and material. It is that costly overcoming that we celebrate symbolically every year.
But the picture is not perfect.
As we all know, Sri Lankans are not known for their   martial qualities. It is not for strength or fire power that the world acknowledges us.  Any mention of the country off-shore inevitably invokes references to easy going people, tea, balmy beaches, cricket, troubled situations, economic refugees   and even the tsunami of 2004. We have not militarily fought any foreign force and given the realities of geographical power balance in the region will never be called upon to do so. But since independence our armed forces have been brought out to fight three   distinct “wars”. In 1971 they were jolted by the sudden insurrection of the JVP which, after terrifying a complacent nation for a few weeks, soon petered out. The second insurrection by the JVP/DJV (1983-1989) was a far more prolonged and brutal affair during which the nation virtually hemorrhaged. Much of the activities of the JVP/DJV were justified by them on the basis of patriotism. That insurrection too was very brutally put down by the armed forces.
However, the challenge posed by the assorted Tamil terrorist groups, particularly the LTTE, was of a different magnitude altogether. Lasting nearly four decades, the war was most times sporadic and of low intensity, punctuated occasionally by large scale battles which seemed to have ended in stalemates. The seemingly endless and intractable challenge posed by the LTTE nearly unhinged the Sri Lankan power elite. A mere tracing of the empty  rhetoric, emotional responses, gut reactions and so called initiatives taken by Colombo in the forty odd years of the war will show us the panic and confusion  that dictated policy. Finally, when the government decided to fight all out, the much larger and better equipped army won.
So the “enemy “has always been sons of the soil. It is young men and women born in this country, and born mainly since independence, who have taken to arms against the government. On both sides of the trenches we had Sri Lankans firing at each other. It is often said that in a democracy there is no need to take to arms as we have the option of changing governments peacefully by the exercise of the ballot. Obviously something is wrong here.
At the independence parade when we observe the armed strength on display, we cannot ignore the reality that this force had been used only against those of the country. As a symbol of strength that picture cannot be correct. No army should have as its sole purpose the suppression or destruction of its own people. Its function is not to terrify its own. This is a symbol in error.
Who is to be blamed for the confused symbolisms of our era ? We cannot erase from our minds the picture of those generously proportioned men, in their uncommon “common man’s “dress, with their self-satisfied smirks, glaring at us from every edifice. To a large extent it is they, who have guided and shaped our evolution. They represent many of the things that have happened and also gone wrong in this country. If they symbolize the nation, they also surely symbolize a poverty of spirit, culture and above all of philosophy .

SL may be in a tight spot in April

THURSDAY, 07 FEBRUARY 2013
Sri Lanka may face a tight situation at the April meeting of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) in London with the likelihood of the country being included in the Agenda for the meeting, informed sources said yesterday

As a preemptive measure External Affairs Minister G.L Peries met Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma on Tuesday in London with the intention of warding off such an inclusion.

However, he received no confirmation from Mr. Sharma that Sri Lanka will not be included in the agenda. The situation has worsened for Sri Lanka because of heightened pressure from Canada, which is part of the present cycle of the CMAG and the threat by Prime Minister Stephen Harper to keep away from the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) to be held in Sri Lanka in November this year.

“The minister made a strong case against the inclusion of Sri Lanka as an agenda item at the CMAG meeting. The minister pointed out that such a course of action is contrary to the decisions taken by the Commonwealth Heads of Government at their meeting in Perth, Western Australia in October 2011 regarding the mandate of CMAG and the scope of its functions,” the minister’s office said in a media release.

The present membership of the CMAG consists of Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, Jamaica, Maldives, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago and Vanuatu and is reconstituted at every CHOGM. Maldives membership has been suspended on the grounds it is being investigated by the group.

Meanwhile the External Affairs Ministry said the minister described to the Secretary-General the developments which had taken place in Sri Lanka during the past few months and emphasized the need to preserve the essential character of the Commonwealth as a voluntary association of sovereign States, characterised by a striking diversity of cultures and outlook among the 54 member states of the organisation.

The minister said any attempt to politicise the organisation or to permit its structures and mechanisms to be used as instruments by some countries to interfere in the domestic issues of other countries, would inevitably distort the cultural ethos of the Commonwealth and pose significant challenges with regard to its future.

Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma told the visiting minister that he was looking forward to his visit to Sri Lanka and that he was pleased with the arrangements which were under way for the meeting of the Heads of Government.

The minister briefed Mr. Sharma about the discussions which he held in New Delhi last month regarding the summit and in particular about Sri Lanka's support for the Secretary-General's proposal with regard to the establishment of a Commonwealth Bank for Trade and Investment.

Mr. Sharma was also briefed about the recent visits to Sri Lanka by Senator Robert Carr, Australia's Minister for Foreign Affairs and Ms. Julie Bishop, Australia's Deputy Leader of the Opposition and Shadow Foreign Minister.

The minister said Australia was sharing with Sri Lanka the experience it had gained from successfully organising the last meeting of the Heads of Government less than two years ago and that this collaboration was greatly appreciated by Sri Lanka. (Dianne Silva)

Midweek Politics: The Struggle For Liberty

By Dharisha Bastians -February 6, 2013
Dharisha Bastians
Colombo Telegraph“The rise of the Nazis was made possible because the elite of German society worked with them, but also, above all else, because most in Germany at least tolerated this rise. Human rights do not assert themselves on their own; freedom does not emerge on its own and democracy does not succeed on its own” -  Angela Merkel on the 80th Anniversary of
Hitler’s rise to power
On the 80th Anniversary of Adolf Hitler’s rise to power as Chancellor, Germany declared open a new exhibit at its Topography of Terror open air museum, located at the former headquarters of the Gestapo, or Nazi secret police. The exhibition entitled, “Berlin 1933. On the Path to Dictatorship”, traces the Fuhrer’s early days in power, largely through newspapers, posters and historically stunning photographs. The exhibit also showcases an iconic poster dated 1 April 1933, one of the earliest Nazi propaganda notices against the country’s Jewish community. “Germans, defend yourselves! Don’t buy from Jews,” it reads, urging Germans to boycott Jewish shops and services.
Sri Lanka, in the recent past, has seen the rise of very similar propaganda material largely targeted at enterprises run by Muslims. The posters and banners paraded through the streets of certain towns by Sinhalese extremist groups, urge the Sinhalese to stand up to defend their race by boycotting Muslim food products, clothing chains and restaurants.
It might be called premature and hyperbolic to draw comparisons between Nazi propaganda and the type of Muslim paranoia being created by the Sinhalese extremists groups in Sri Lanka today. Since the ugly incident in Kuliyapitiya, where protesting groups carried offensive images and paraded them in front of Muslim places of business, there has been a lull in overt anti–Muslim activities being reported.
Fires started
But fires started are not so easily quelled. Hate is a universal language and hate speech has a way of catching on. The internet is exploding with anti-Muslim sites created by purported Sinhala Buddhistorganizations. Facebook pages are sporting deeply offensive pictures, in a language that does great harm to trust and respect between communities of people. There is still talk of impending destruction of sacred Muslim shrines and allegedly ‘unauthorized’ mosques. The campaigns against these sites are gaining ground on social media networks. This anger directed against the ‘other’ and the extremists’ perception of being usurped, Sri Lanka well knows from the experience of its very own Crystal Night in July 1983, can wreak irreparable damage on a nation’s psyche.
Often it does not even take a ‘night of broken glass’ or communal riots to break the hearts of a minority community. When fires engulfed the iconic Jaffna Library, that beating heart and cultural root-spring of Northern Tamil culture, they did not merely burn age old manuscripts and hundreds of thousands of irreplaceable books. The fire also seared human hearts, tore apart communities and stoked different fires, of nationalism, separatism and ethnic strife.
The propaganda parallels therefore, seem apt, and even necessary, if vigilance is the price to pay to prevent a tragedy of such magnitude again.
The Muslim Council wants to play down the rhetoric. On 3 February, the Council defended the justifiable right of the Muslim community to celebrate Independence, with their political leaders having fought as hard for Sri Lanka’s freedom from colonial rule six decades ago. “Our population is not growing. Talk to the Department of Census, we were 9 percent 1000 years ago. We are still at that number, we will never be the majority,” the council’s representatives, pleaded against the extremist rhetoric that is warning Sinhalese Sri Lanka will be a Muslim majority nation in a few years. The pleas were profoundly indicative of how desperately Muslim moderates sought to allay the fears of the majority race.
Muslims cautious                                         Read More
Sri Lanka rules out entry to IBA lawyers
Zeenews
 Thursday, February 07, 2013,
Colombo: Calling it a "direct threat" to its sovereignty, Sri Lanka on Thursday said it will "never" allow the entry of a delegation of international lawyers led by former chief justice of India JS Verma to probe the controversial impeachment of the country's first woman chief justice. 

"They will never be allowed entry for fact-finding missions, they can come as tourists", Keheliya Rambukwella, government spokesman and the Minister of Information said. 

"The IBA (International Bar Association) visit if allowed would be a direct threat to Sri Lanka's sovereignty", he said. 
Delegates from the IBA's Human Rights Institute led by Justice Verma were scheduled to visit Sri Lanka from February 1-10 but were denied entry visas by Sri Lankan authorities. 

The government said the IBA members had given false reasons on the purpose of their visit when applying for their entry visa at the Sri Lankan mission in London. 

The IBA rejecting the allegation said that they had ticked the relevant box which implied that their visit was to attend conferences and seminars, adding that the electronic entry application does not provide for giving 'other' reasons to visit Sri Lanka. 

The delegation was to assess rule of law and independence of the judiciary after the controversial impeachment of the country's first woman chief justice Shirani Bandaranayake by the parliament last month that received international criticism. 

The parliamentary committee had ruled that Bandaranayake was guilty of three of the 14 charges in the impeachment proceedings moved against her by the ruling UPFA coalition legislators. 

The three charges were of financial impropriety based on non-declaration of assets and conflict of interest in a case involving a failed investment company. 

PTI 

Some Thoughts On The Envisaged Third Republican Constitution


Colombo TelegraphBy Lakshman I.Keerthisinghe -February 7, 2013 
Lakshman Keerthisinghe
When the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person or in the same body or magistrates there can be no liberty. Again there is no liberty if the judicial power is not liberated from legislative and executive powers .Where it is joined with legislative power, the life and liberty of the subject would be exposed to arbitrary control; for the judge would then be the legislator. Were it joined with executive power the judge might behave with violence and oppression. - Montesquieu L’Espirit des Lois (1748)
Mahinda Chinthana-Towards a new Sri Lanka –Victory for Sri Lanka the policy statement issued  before the Presidential election of 2005 stated thus:
‘With the consensus of all, I expect to present a Constitution that will propose the abolition if the Executive Presidency and to provide solution to other issues confronting the country. In the interim I propose to present a constitutional amendment through which the Executive President will be made answerable to the parliament by virtue of holding such office.’
Undoubtedly the Constitution is the supreme law of the land which has to be obeyed by all citizens without exception. The Doctrine of Separation of Powers was clearly spelt out in the words of Montesquieu, who is considered the father of that doctrine in the statement set out at the outset of the present article. The idea originated in the philosophy of Aristotle in his treatise The Politics. Plato in his celebrated work ‘The Republic’ analyzed the difference between a democracy and a tyranny. Undue concentration of power in one individual is not beneficial for the smooth functioning of a state as it would undoubtedly lead to tyranny in the final analysis. As Lord Acton said ‘Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely’
Sri Lanka has been ruled under the present Second Republican Constitution of 1978 for three and a half decades, the Eighteenth Amendment being passed in 2010.A Nineteenth Amendment is said to be in the offing granting more power to the parliament and the Executive Presidency thus reducing the independence of the judiciary. In the words of Montesquieu ‘Again there is no liberty if the judicial power is not liberated from legislative and executive powers.’ Thus it is evident that the liberty of our people is at stake unless some meaningful steps are taken by His Excellency the President as stated in Mahinda Chinthana quoted above to present a new constitution abolishing the Executive Presidency and providing for a system of checks and balances between the three arms of the government, the Legislature, the Executive and the Judiciary, thereby asserting the independence of the judiciary thus ensuring good governance and fair administration in Sri Lanka. The Speaker Hon.Chamal Rajapakse has also spoken about the need for a new Constitution.
This article attempts to provide some thoughts for a Third Republican Constitution for Sri Lanka. As Sri Lanka comprises of a multiethnic, multicultural and multi-religious society in order to achieve unity among people of all races and creeds in Sri Lanka the new constitution must avoid provisions that may grant undue advantages to the majority community but be conscious of the needs of all races and creeds providing equal opportunities to all Sri Lankans to live in peace and harmony with each other. As Lord Buddha advocated the concept of re-incarnation or re-birth in Buddhist Philosophical teachings the majority community should realize that there is nothing to prevent its members being reborn in this land as members of a minority race. The great teachings of the Buddha exhorted that one should realize that individual identity is a fallacy. Thus it is advisable to grant equal rights to all citizens in a new constitutional arrangement thereby ensuring communal harmony and obviating ethnic conflict of any form whatsoever.
Hon. Sirimavo Bandaranaike in her speech delivered at the dinner to inaugurate the series of seminars on Constitutional Reform for Sri Lanka held as far back as 27th November 1987 conducted by The Council for a Liberal Democracy stated thus: ‘….the Constitution of a country is not to be treated lightly as just another law or mere scrap of paper. It is a sacred trust not to be quibbled away by clever arguments or words. It embodies certain principles which must never be disrespected. It is a trust in which if you undermine the principles and ignore the trust you break all the tendons and cords that bind society together.’ Advocating the abolition of the Executive Presidency that great lady, a former Prime Minister of Sri Lanka and the first lady Prime Minister in the world  in her wisdom further stated: ‘In the Constitution the President is the de facto Government. The Courts have no jurisdiction over him. When the judiciary has no jurisdiction over this kind of executive, justice and freedom are really at a standstill….I hope to appeal as our party’s candidate at the next Presidential Election to restore Parliamentary Democracy in this island as when I first entered politics in 1960 and when our government was defeated in 1977….This country is safest in the hands of its people. A single person or group however well-intentioned is not a substitute for that broad good sense of the people acting together and through their elected representatives of Parliament who are answerable to them and who ask for a renewal of their mandate through periodically held General Elections….We have to build a different Constitution where Parliament is supreme with only the sovereign people above it.’
It is also advisable that Sri Lanka returns to the bi-cameral system of Government that prevailed in the past by having an upper house or a Senate. If a bill that has been passed by the lower house or the Parliament fails to secure a 2/3rds majority vote in the Senate it shall not become law. This would prevent the hasty rushing through of legislation by suspending standing orders without sufficient time being granted to discuss important pieces of legislation that affects the stability and the well being of the nation and thus liberate legislators from the authoritarian  party discipline  that enforces servility, stultifies original thinking and thus deviates from  the basic tenets of parliamentary democracy. The Senate shall comprise of mature, well educated respectable national minded gentlemen and ladies of the highest caliber and be a representative body of all races and creeds of our people. The senators should be statesmen, As Sir Ivor Jennings stated a statesman is a selfless person who only thinks of the future prosperity and the well-being of the nation whereas a politician is a selfish person who only thinks of how to come to power at the next election and ensure his own personal well being.
Discussing the independence of the judiciary under the present Constitution Mr.H.L.De Silva PC in his speech titled ‘The Role of the Judiciary in the Protection of Constitutional Rights’ stated: ‘Considering the fact that the present Constitution confers on the Supreme Court the power to determine vitally important questions affecting both Parliament as well as the President, there is no warrant for relegating the Supreme Court to an inferior position. Apart from the special and exclusive jurisdiction granted to the court to determine the constitutionality of Bills and infringement of fundamental rights, it has the power to report on other virtually important matters, whether or not the President himself has violated the Constitution or whether the office of the President has become vacant by reason of the matters stated in Article 38(1),whether or not a member of Parliament has been duly elected, whether or not he has been validly expelled from his own political party and so on. In all such matters the courts act independently of Parliament and it is meaningless to consider such powers being exercised by Parliament through courts.’ The independence of the judiciary should be further strengthened by the envisaged third Republican Constitution for Sri Lanka if the liberty of our people is to be safeguarded. Mr.De Silva very aptly further stated :’When the Judges themselves show indecision and do not show evidence of any consistent attitude the Judiciary becomes vulnerable to either open attacks or insidious pressures that erode judicial independence. This must surely lead to an undermining of the very foundation of the Rule of Law upon which the whole democratic edifice is constructed.’ The stark reality revealed by these words stated by Mr.De Silva on 28th August 1988 (a quarter of a century ago) when he was the President of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka at the Seminar on Constitutional Reform conducted by The Council for a Liberal Democracy would strike the reader in considering the events that took place during the impeachment process of the Chief Justice Dr.S.A.Bandaranayake. Let the people of Sri Lanka collectively and meticulously construct a Third Republican Constitution for our country safeguarding the democratic edifice that Sri Lanka has painstakingly built over the years lest the whole edifice comes crumbling down destroying the very foundations of Rule of Law thereby bringing misery and instability to our people in our precious motherland, the beautiful pearl of the Indian Ocean.
*Lakshman I.Keerthisinghe LLB, LLM. MPhil, Attorney-ay-Law

Wednesday, February 6, 2013


Photos from Sri Lanka's killing fields


No Fire Zone - Trailer


06/02/2013
Frances Harrison recently wrote for the Times of India about how the Government of Sri Lanka is turning the site of the final battles of the civil war, where tens of thousands of civillians were killed, into a tourist attraction. The article unfortunately did not include the many pictures provided which evidenced the piece, and so we are presenting them here. These photos show both the triumpahalism with which the Government of Sri Lanka is presenting these sites, and also the evidence of war crimes that is now turning up due to heavy rain. All words and pictures that follow are from Frances Harrison.
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.
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. 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
More pictures are available via Frances Harrison's Jux visualisation.
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Survival is a daily struggle
WEDNESDAY, 06 FEBRUARY 2013 



Anti-Imperialist People’s Movement staged a Protest march from the Lake-House roundabout to the Hyde Park this evening mainly urging the government to bring down the unbearable cost-of-living. Pix by Pradeep Pathirana






Thamils Should Not Lose Heart, But Fight Back Peacefully


By Veluppillai Thangavelu -February 5, 2013 
Veluppillai Thangavelu
Colombo TelegraphPresident Mahinda Rajapaksa is holding Sri Lanka’s  65th independence anniversary celebration with pomp  and gaiety  in Trincomalee this year. The choice of  Trincomalee,  a once predominantly Thamil dominated district as the venue should not be lost in the cry for justice.
At the time of independence in 1948  the Thamils constituted 44.51 (33,795) of the population in Trincomalee as compared to Muslims 30.58  (23,219) and Sinhalese 15.29 (11,606) but today the demography has been drastically altered. The Thamils now (2012) constitute only  30.6 (115,549) Muslims 40.4 (152,854) and Sinhalese 27.0  (101,991). There is no need to explain why the Thamil population declined so dramatically. In 1827 the Thamils constituted 81.80  (15,663) of the population, the Muslims only 16.90 (3,245) and Sinhalese a mere 1.3 (250). The Muslims between 1981 and 2012 have more than doubled their numbers from 75,039 to 152,854 (11.08)  as seen in the following Table 1:
*2001 Census was only carried out partially in Trincomalee district
Independence for the Thamils have meant slow liquidation of their identity as a Nation  that  lived in well defined territory with their own language, arts, culture, customs and heritage. They have been living in the Northeast historically for several centuries.
On February 4, 1948  2  million Thamils of Ceylon exchanged their white masters (British) for the brown sahibs the Sinhalese. It was like jumping from the frying pan into the fire.
Sri Lanka, then Ceylon, would not have gained independence from Britain without the support and consent of the Thamil people. That was   exactly what happened on that fateful day! Thamil legislators trustingD.S.Senanayake almost voted with their feet  giving a 4/5 majority  for the constitutional recommendations.   These constitutional recommendations were largely those of the 1944 Board of Ministers’ draft, a document reflecting the influence of D.S. Senanayake behind the scene  and his main advisor, Sir Ivor Jennings. It ushered in Dominion status and Independence to Sri Lanka then Ceylon in 1948.
On the eve of the arrival of Soulbury Commissioners,   D.S.Senanayake  master-minded the appointment ofArunachalam Mahadeva to the Pan Sinhala Board of Ministers  as the Minister of Home Affairs to project a “Ceylonese” vision for Sri Lanka, i.e., co-operation of all the ethnic and minority religious groups. It was a diplomatic coup by Senanayake and the Commissioners fell for the ruse ignoring past history.
The Thamil Congress, led by Ponnambalam,  argued  for  50-50 representation, an artificial  concept doomed to failure in the face of   “one man-one vote” concept thoroughly accepted in European liberalism. However, theKandyan Sinhalese were more pragmatic and wiser. They proposed a Federal scheme where the Up-country region, the Low-country, and the North would be three federal states. Their suggestions were rejected by the commissioners who found no merit in the federal proposals.
In fact,  it was the Thamil leaders like Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan (1851-1930) and Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam (1853-1924) who fearlessly spearheaded the struggle for constitutional reforms that led to independence from colonial yoke.
However, the Ponnambalam brothers in their evening of life realised that the Sinhalese politicians have let them down the garden path and taken them for a ride to advance the interests of the majority community at the expense of the Thamil people. Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan foresaw that the democratic principle of one-person one vote in a heterogeneous society would ultimately lead to tyranny of  the majority.
In a speech to the Legislative Council during the debate on the Donoughmore Reforms, Mr. Ramanathan appears the precursor of the Thamils demand for a sovereign state of Thamil Eelam.
“Why did the (Donoughmore) Commissioners not study Ireland, which is next door to them? They (Irish) said that we are one lot and you are another. We cannot work together. We must have separate governments. Then I ask what happened in the Dominion of Canada? The officials concerned said, it is an impossible situation…. Let us give these French descendants one form of government and let us give the other people another form of government – forms of government suitable to the interests of each of these great big communities. Why did the Commissioners think of that?”
It was Sir Arunachalam Ponnambalam who first (1923) exhorted the Thamils that -
“they should work towards promoting the union and solidarity of what we have been proud to call THAMIL EELAM. We desire to preserve our individuality as a people, to make ourselves worthy of inheritance. We are not enamoured about the cosmopolitanism which would make us neither fish, fowl nor red-herring.”
D.S.Senanayake, the first Prime Minister of independent Ceylon, gave the following solemn promise to the Thamil and other minority communities “no harm need you (non-Sinhalese) fear at our hands (Sinhalese) in a free Lanka.” He was speaking in the State Council in October 1945 when all the Thamil members had unanimously voted for the acceptance of the Soulbury constitution in a White Paper.
“Do you want to be governed from London or do you want, as Ceylon, to help govern Ceylon? On behalf of the (Ceylon National) Congress (founded by Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam in 1919) and on my behalf, I give the minority communities the sincere assurance that no harm need you fear at our hands in a free Lanka.”
But in 1948, the very year of Independence, D.S.Senanayake blatantly went back on the promise and bared his true colours as an unrepentant  champion of Sinhala chauvinism by depriving one million Thamils of their citizenship.
The Citizenship Act No.18 was unique in that it denied citizenship to a person born in the country before or after 1948 unless, at least, his father was born in or was a citizen of Sri Lanka. The following year, the same Thamils were deprived of their franchise rights by a simple amendment to the  Parliamentary Elections Ordinance  that stated only citizens  have the right to vote in elections. This  reduced Thamils representation in Parliament  from 33 in 1948 to a mere 20 in 1952.
The Citizenship Act No. 18 of 1948 opened the floodgates to further legislative and administrative acts, which robbed Thamils of their language, educational, and employment rights.
It might be informative at this stage to recapitulate the history of the National conflict between the Thamil Nation and the Sinhala Nation.
National Conflict Between the Thamil Nation and the Sinhala Nation
The Thamils and the Sinhalese are divided on the basis of territory, language, religion, and culture. The enmity between the Thamils and the Sinhalese go back to at least two centuries before Christ.
The Mahavamsa, a Buddhist chronicle written in the 6th century AD by a Buddhist monk portrays the Naga King Dutugemunu as the National Hero who defeated the Thamil King Ellalan and unified the whole of Ceylon. Though Buddhism infinitely values human life as being the one and only condition from which nibbana (salvation) could be attained, Mahavamsa made a virtue of killing in defence of Buddhism. This 5th century AD chronicle  has been used to raise the cry of Race, Land and Faith by the Sinhalese-Buddhist chauvinistic forces during the past  years.
The Mahavamsa has perpetrated the myth that Sinhalese-Buddhists are a chosen people with the special mission of preserving the Buddhist religion in Sri Lanka. Dr.Walpola Rahula, a scholar monk, wrote “for more than two millennia the Sinhalese have been inspired that they were a nation brought into being for the definite purpose of carrying the torch lit by Buddha.”
In Mahavamsa tradition the Thamils are considered  unbelievers, villains and invaders. It is the Mahavamsa theory that the Island as a whole belongs to the Sinhalese Buddhists only, and that there is no place or only second class status for Thamils. This Mahavamsa tradition is the root cause of the present conflict between the Thamil Nation and the Sinhala Nation.
Those who wish to see an end to the national question  would have to take into consideration the Mahavamsa mind-set. For it is the Mahavamsa mode of thinking which has influenced all the rulers, especially the governments of post independence Ceylon.
Broken Promises and Pacts
The planned state-aided colonization of Thamil traditional Homelands, the Sinhala Only Act, the recognition of Buddhism as the state religion, the lion flag as the national flag, the national anthem and the stubborn insistence on a unitary constitution are manifestations of the Mahavamsa mind-set deeply embedded in the Sinhalese psyche. Initiatives in the past to settle the national question  by the signing of the Bandaranaike -Chelvanayakam pact (1957), Dudley SenanayakeChelvanayakam pact (1965), and the Indo-Ceylon Accord (1987) failed because of this single factor.
Colonization
Through  systematic state-aided Sinhalese colonisation of the traditional homelands of the Thamils, the demographic profile of the Thamils has been drastically altered. In the Eastern Province, the once majority Thamil community (53.54  in 1921) has been reduced to a minority 39.79 in 2012 (42.06 in 1981) whereas the percentage of Sinhalese rose from 4.53  in 1921 to a staggering 23.15 in 2012 (24.99 in 1981).
TABLE 2
Island wide the Thamil population also declined steeply from 26.69 in 1901 to 15.37 in 2012 as shown by the following Table 3:
In 1946 the  Thamils (both Ceylon and Thamils of Indian origin) constituted 22.75  (1,514,300) and Sinhalese 69.41 (4,620,500), but in 2011 the Thamil population declined to 15.37  (3,113,247) while the Sinhalese population rose to 74.88 (15,173,820). This decline is reflected in the dilution of their parliamentary representation as the following  Table 4 shows:
The repatriation of  525,000 Thamils  of Indian origin  in the seventies reduced their population from 1,174,900 in 1971 to 818,700 in 1981.
Sinhala Army  of Occupation
There are more than 265 Sri Lankan army, naval and air force camps (about 90 of total camps in Sri Lanka) scattered throughout the North and East.  In the North alone there are army camps in 153 Grama Niladhari Divisions.  Out of a total of 20 Divisions 17 are stationed in the North (15) and East (2) consisting of  more than 150,000 soldiers. Along A9 highway there are over 30 army camps. The heartland of  Vanni is dotted with army cantonments, army camps, naval and air force bases. The army has taken to cultivation on lands previously owned by the Thamil people in a big way.
West of the Iranamadu Tank  and  East of the A-9 highway 25 acres of land are being cultivated by the army with vegetables; in Theravil, almost 150 acres of  land are being cultivated by the army with fruit trees, in Vellamkulam, about 600 acres of land are being cultivated by the army with cadjunuts,  in Mukkombu 100 acres of land are being cultivated by the army with coconuts; in Chunnavil, 600 acres of lands are being cultivated by the army with cadjunuts.  These are all in  Vanni. A large extent of paddy fields under village tanks are being cultivated by the army. The army is engaging in all these activities in lands previously owned by Thamils.  These areas are out of bounds for civilians.
In Murugandy a mega housing scheme consisting of 10,000 houses covering 12,000 acres of fertile land previously owned by Thamil peasants is ready for occupation by army personnel.  The housing scheme  built by Chinese is complete with all infra-structural facilities like roads, schools, hospitals, water, electricity etc. The displaced Thamils have been asked to fend for themselves in welfare centres.
In the Jaffna peninsula a  total of 716 private properties are under occupation by the army. Out of these, 378 lands are with houses, 283 are plain lands and 46 lands are business buildings. The SLA has also seized 9 public lands for its use outside the HSZ. Further 253 lands are under the control of the Sri Lanka Navy, 123 of these are with houses, 104 plain lands, 7 lands with commercial buildings and 19 public lands. 64 lands are under the control of the Sri Lanka Police, 57 of these lands are with houses, 5 plain lands and at least one with a commercial building. Now, the SL military is seeking to legalise the seizure to enable itself to establish permanent cantonments in Jaffna.
2013 Budget The 2013 budget envisages a 13.5 percent increase in spending from 2.22 trillion rupees to 2.52 trillion rupees (US$19.5 billion). Total Projected Income for year 2013 Rs. 1,280.00 Billion resulting in a Budget Deficit of Rs. 1,240.00 Billion. In 2012 the budget deficit was Rs 468 billion.
Like in the past years a major chunk of the budget is allocated for the Defence and Urban Development Ministry with 289.5 billion rupees. The amount is an increase of nearly Rs. 60 billion from last year’s allocations of 229.9 billion rupees, an increase of 26.  The Ministry of  Rehabilitation and Prison Reforms  has been allocated  a pittance of  Rs.500 million!
The total maximum borrowing for 2013 has been increased by 12.6 percent from 2012 to 1.3 trillion. The debt repayment expenditure in 2013 will rise to 1,154 billion rupees ($US9.1 billion) from 914 billion rupees in 2012, a 26 percent increase. Total outstanding loans were 6,262 billion rupees, a 23 percent increase over the previous year. Of that total, external foreign currency loans accounted for 2,981 billion rupees, up by nearly 33 .
Sri Lanka is maintaining the largest army in the world on a per capita basis. Sri Lanka’s population of 21 million has a standing army of 500,000. Ninety-five percent of the army consists of  Sinhalese.  This means that there is a soldier  for every 42  persons in the population. India has an army of  1.13  million and a population of 1020 million, which means a ratio of one soldier to 916 people. On the Sri Lankan ratio India has to have a standing army of 10.2 million.
There are  144 government MPs in Parliament out whom 68  are Ministers and 28 are  Deputy  Ministers.  It cost around Rs. 400 million per Minister per month (about 3 million US dollars). The government also proposes to appoint 25 District Ministers. That will escalate the number of Ministers to 121 leaving only 23 ordinary MPs. The tragedy is Mahinda Rajapaksa gets away with jumbo cabinet, corruption, nepotism and authoritinism  without much ado.
Human Rights Violations
In its Word Report  the Human Rights Watch slammed the  Sri Lankan government claiming ” Sri Lanka continued its assault on civil society and failed to take meaningful steps towards accountability for war crimes during the country’s armed conflict that ended in 2009.
There was no fundamental progress on key human rights issues in Sri Lanka over the past year, Human Rights Watch said. Overly broad detention powers remained in place under various laws and regulations, leaving several thousand people detained without charge. State security forces committed arbitrary arrests and torture, including sexual assault, against ethnic minority Thamils. Repatriated Thamils allegedly linked to the defeated Liberation Tigers of Thamil Eelam (LTTE) were at particular risk, Human Rights Watch research found. While the Thamil population in the north benefitted from greater access by humanitarian groups, the military presence kept living conditions from being normalized.
“The Sri Lankan government needs to address the many problems that undermine basic rights for people in the war-torn North and East,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Justice and accountability for abuses, an end to torture in detention, and ending constraints on basic liberties continue to prove elusive for the Thamil population.”
The UN Human Rights Council, responding to the government’s prolonged failure to investigate alleged laws of war violations, adopted a resolution in March 2012 calling on Sri Lanka to take all necessary steps to ensure justice and accountability.
“UN member states have made it clear through the Human Rights Council resolution in March and theUniversal Periodic Review hearings in November that Sri Lanka needs to make fast and meaningful progress on its rights commitments,” Adams said. “The Sri Lankan government should recognize that its past stalling tactics have run their course and that it will need to take real action.”
President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his siblings continued the trend of recent years to accumulate power at the expense of democratic institutions, including the judiciary, and constrict free speech and association. The government targeted civil society through threats and surveillance. Statements by government officials and government-controlled media named and threatened human rights defenders who called for accountability for wartime abuses or criticized other government policies.
“There is ample evidence that Sri Lanka’s current government acts to serve its own interests at great cost to democratic institutions and equal treatment of all communities,” said Adams.
“When a government fails to protect the rights of its citizens, the need for international action increases,” Adams said. “The international community in 2012 focused renewed attention on Sri Lanka, and given the lack of progress on accountability and the shrinking political space, should continue to do so.”
But for Mahinda Rajapaksa it is business as usual. He has sacked the Chief Justice Dr.Shirani Bandaranayke with minimum fall out. The  unprecedented constitutional crisis elicited only  a yawn.  It has not made any dent on the popularity of the government. Mahinda Rajapaksa  continues to ride on the wave of Sinhala nationalism.  The black coated fraternity which threatened not to recognize any new Chief Justice  has  now fallen in line. 
The government unlike last time, is taking things easy about the forthcoming 22 nd sessions of the UNHRC in Geneva in March, 2013. No Ministers will take wings to Geneva only diplomats will attend. Foreign MinisterG.L. Peiris says Sri Lanka will lobby enough votes to defeat US resolution.  He  is confident that unlike last time  India will support Sri Lanka.
There is no progress in the implementation of the LLRC recommendations. The Army says it will not withdraw from North and East. In fact the army is building more bases and refusing to dismantle the HSZs it is occupying. The Thamils IDPs in their thousands continue to languish in camps and welfare centres. In short militarization, Sinhalization and Budhistization of the North and East continue merrily.
Not withstanding the fact that the Thamils are in the political doldrums, economic stagnation and social strangulation since independence, we should not lose heart  but fight back peacefully  to regain our lost freedom and dignity.  It may not be within our  power, may not be in our time,  but if  we choose to stand firm, unrelenting and continue to resist we shall prevail one day.
*Veluppillai Thangavelu is a Tamil Canadian of Thamil Eelam origin. His native village is Colombothurai in the outskirts of Jaffna Municipality. He was born on February 10, 1933  in a modest farming family. 
He joined the Government Clerical Service in 1952. Later he joined the Local Government Service as an Accountant and served in Jaffna Municipal Council (1966-1972) Batticaloa Municipal Council (1972-1973) Dehiwela Mt. Lavania Municipal Council (1973-1977) and Colombo Municipal Council (1977-1980). He was also acting Municipal Commissioner (1967-1968) of Jaffna Municipality. In 1980 he joined the Bauchi State (Nigeria) Audit department as Principal Auditor. In 1987 he resigned his post and migrated to Canada and joined A. A. Jamal Associates, Chartered Accountants, Markham as an Auditor. He retired in 1995. 
He is the author of Sothidap Puraddu(Astrology is Fraud) which was released in Thamil Nadu in 2006 by Periyaar Dravidar Kazhakam and in Canada in 1997. This book (700 pages) in Thamil is the first to comprehensively debunk astrology as a pseudo  science with facts and figures.
Thangavelu is the President of Thamil Creative Writers Association (TCWA) founded in 2002.