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, February 9, 2013


Mayor Muza unmasks Muslim Ministers!


  • Claims Muslim Ministers took Muslim votes but won’t speak up on extremism against Muslim
community
  • Says Rauff Hakeem either won’t speak up or Govt. is not listening
  • Urges UNP Leader to take disciplinary action against SLMC and expel MPs
By Dharisha Bastians-February 9, 2013 
Remaining silent in the wake of the massive anti-Muslim campaign that is sweeping across the country is a great betrayal of the innocent Muslim people by Muslim Ministers holding office in the Government, Mayor of Colombo A.J.M. Muzammil charged yesterday.

The Colombo Mayor said that while the Leader of the Opposition Ranil Wickremesinghe had made a special statement in Parliament about the extremists threatening religious and communal harmony in the country, Muslim Ministers in the Government had not uttered a word.
“These Muslim Ministers took Muslim people’s votes. They are enjoying titles and privileges in the Government. Today they don’t have a backbone to speak up for the Muslims against whom this extremism is spreading,” Muzammil told a media conference yesterday.
He said that submissions had been made to Wickremesinghe to hold a disciplinary inquiry into the conduct of SLMC MPs who are with the Government and not speaking about this issue, having entered Parliament through the UNP Muslim vote.
The Mayor of Colombo said that the Government had responded inadequately to the growing concerns of the Muslims about the culture of intolerance ever since the Anuradhapura mosque attack of 2011.
“Today it has become far more serious. National unity and communal harmony cannot be restricted to words only. The Government must act,” Muzammil asserted.
Mayor…
He said that it was deeply shameful that Muslim Ministers, including Sri Lanka Muslim Congress Leader and Minister of Justice Rauff Hakeem, were silent on these issues. “There are only two explanations: either he won’t speak up, or he is speaking and the Government is refusing to listen,” the Mayor charged.
Mayor Muzammil said that Minister Nimal Siripala De Silva had maintained there were no major incidents and Minister Hakeem had merely agreed.
The Government has a responsibility to protect every citizen of this country and protect every citizen’s religious rights, he said.

Letter forwarded requesting an explanation from Housing Directive Board Permanent houses are getting constructed at the National Housing Directive Board lands by Sinhala people without obtaining permission from Nawatkuli divisional council.
 
A letter has been forwarded to the National Housing Directive Board appealing an explanation, for not getting approval from the divisional council for this activity.
 
54 Sinhala families in the aim of getting settled in Jaffna arrived in year 2010 October month. They temporarily lived at the Jaffna railway station initially and later illegally got settled in the lands belonging to National Housing Directive Board located at Nawatkuli.
 
When they came into occupancy, they temporarily erected huts, and at the end of last year, they are involved in constructing permanent houses.
 
It is compulsory of obtaining the approval from the respective divisional councils for any constructions in state lands or private lands.
 
However the Sinhala people at Nawatkuli, are building their permanent dwellings without obtaining approval from Chavakachcheri divisional council.
 
Water tanks and community center are completely constructed and walls have been raised for 20 houses, and foundations are laid for another 40 houses.
 
 Chavakachcheri divisional council which is under the regime of Tamil National Alliance, its Chairman K.Thurairasa was queried and he said that they are examining this issue.
 
Chairman notified today, a letter has been forwarded to National Housing Directive Board asking their explanation concerning the constructions of these buildings.
Saturday , 09 February 2013

Colombo TelegraphBy Emil van der Poorten -February 9, 2013 
Emil van der Poorten
The title of this column is the final bit of an observation that goes, “The more you do what you’ve always done, the more you’ll get what you always got.”
The highest in the land are once more wallowing in the trough of pander to the racist elements of Southern Sri Lanka with a diatribe about foreign conspiracies and the need for “unity” to repel those elements seeking to “destabilize” that paradise on earth otherwise known as the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka.  Incidentally, a whole column (at least!) will be needed to describe why the official title of our land constitutes the biggest oxymoron of its kind anywhere on planet earth.  However, that will have to wait for another column at another time.
To return to the title of this piece, the mindless berating of “foreign conspirators,” “white imperialists” etc. etc. is so familiar now as a response to every mess created by those doing the berating that it has entered the realm of serious boredom with anyone with even half a brain operating.
The endless “anti-this” and “anti-that” diatribes are devoid of the entertainment value they once  held even for the moronic hordes thirsting for the blood of some minority person as a means of assuaging a thirst for scapegoats to blame for messes of their own creation. However, it must be admitted that, by the looks of it that well of hatred has a long way to go before it runs dry.  The reason for its survival is its constant replenishment with the bile that sycophants who have nowhere else to go after committing to the most corrupt and amoral government in our history keep regurgitating in order to maintain their protected positions with their masters.  To place that old truism in a modern context, there’s nowhere to go but down after you’ve allied yourself with what are, truly, the unmentionables of Sri Lankan history.
This government has actively encouraged the most reprehensible behavior of bigots, chauvinists and racists of the most despicable kind.  How else can one explain the fact that the Dambulla Mosque invasion has gone without even the charade of yet another “Commission of Inquiry?”
How else does one explain the inordinate delay in a Minister of the government being brought to trial after, allegedly, organizing the stoning of a Tamil judge.
How else can one explain the burning of churches and statues built for installation in them without so much as a peep from our so-called “law enforcement agencies?”
How else can one explain the destruction of a Hindu Kovil in the city that is viewed as the birthplace ofBuddhism in this country?
How else can one explain the violent demands made to businesses owned by members of the minorities to put up their shutters and get the hell out before it’s, presumably, done for them?
How else can one explain the hysteria generated by the efforts to have food qualify for the “Halal” tag when such as the fast-food giant McDonalds has, for decades, acted sensitively to the religious prohibitions of theMuslims in the matter of food in their restaurants and Kosher food is a reality all over the world?  What is driving this is only too evident when every Sri Lankan has to adhere to (alleged) Buddhist precepts/prohibitions with regard to the consumption of alcohol and meat, regardless of what OTHER faith they might subscribe to.
The thinly-veiled incitement to violence against the Anglican Bishop of Colombo by a stereotypical lackey of the current regime in a government-owned English-language newspaper is but the most recent of these reprehensible acts that an all-powerful government CHOOSES not to take any action against.
What are we waiting for?  An assassination of a churchman in the manner that befell Archibishop Romero in another place at another time?  A Sri Lankan Kristallnacht with the Muslims taking the place of the Jews eighty years later?
The government of this land, countenancing White Van Disappearances by pretending they don’t occur, is creating the climate for massive mayhem because, no matter how passive and afraid minorities of a religious, ethnic or other description might be, they are going to be FORCED to react violently once that threshold is crossed and they know their lives are on the line.   To put it mildly, what we can expect, in good Sri Lankan slang and to seriously understate the case, is “one pol mess.”  Remember, if it believes that its life is at stake, even a worm will turn.  There will be little other choice for the “worms” of the minorities.
Of course the owners of casinos, drug-networks and ultra-luxury cars will continue to have state-financed private armies with even better weaponry than is now available to them within their current “security” arrangements.
And, for a time at least, the temporarily pandered-to minions from the peasantry who are being deliberately separated from their brethren by the bribes of enhanced salaries and perks will jig to the tune of their masters.  The question that those setting up this scenario better ask themselves, though, is how long a brother is going to turn his gun against his sibling, how long are adult children going to ignore the plight of their less-fortunate parents or their children deprived of the necessities of life?
Rest assured, though, when violence is coupled with stupidity or a gross lack of intelligence or total ignorance of the lessons of history, this kind of thing will unfold in duly ordained fashion, no matter how tragic the consequences.
That appears to be the fate awaiting ALL of us, thanks to the combination of an electorate who, perhaps, received adult universal franchise prematurely, politicians who exploited that quirk of history to reduce governance to a sub-human, “might-is-right” exercise and a so-called “leadership” that is without equal in its capacity for maliciousness, caprice and pure, unadulterated greed.
Welcome to the rest of the 21st Century (or whatever we are going to be left of it) in the Debacle of Asia!


How can you'll get settled in the lands lived by Tamil people? With whose permission you'll are building houses?  Why are you'll living here? You’ll should live in the lands in which you occupied before? Was the questions raised by Tamil National Alliance parliament member Suresh Piremachandran from the people living at Nawatkuli.
Tamil National Alliance Jaffna district parliament member Suresh Piremachandran yesterday visited the Tamil families living in the lands belonging to the Housing Directive Board at Nawatkuli yesterday.
A group went along with Suresh Piremachandran took photographs of the areas where Sinhala people are living, and the Sinhala people in loud voices objected to refrain from taking photographs of them.
Parliament member asked the people who are you'll to stop us from taking photographs, hence the Sinhala people had an argument with the parliament member.
Tamil people lived before in these lands. Can’t you'll see it from the coconut trees. Was the question raised by parliament member Suresh Piremachandran, in reply they said, when we came none was living here.
They may have left here, but this is their land was said by MP, and in reply the Sinhala people said, this is state land, that's why we are occupying.
In return MP asked, whether these lands given to you'll, and the people said no. If it so, how could you'll construct permanent houses and whose permission you'll obtained was asked by MP from  the Sinhala people.
Our bhikkus assisted, earlier we lived at Maniyanthottam was their reply. If it so, why are you'll living here, it is better to go to Maniyamthottam was said by MP.
When the arguments were occurring, the forces came to the locality. They questioned the parliament member why he came to this area, in reply he said, I came to see the people, and he went to visit  the Tamil people.
He  gave assurance to the Tamil people that immediately through he divisional council he would make arrangements for drinking water facilities, general well, and library from the allocated budget proposal funds.
He further said the necessary stationery to the students from  that area schools will be distributed on Tuesday.

Saturday , 09 February 2013

The writing on the wall

Saturday, 09 February 2013 
The Sri Lankan president's public rejection of Tamil autonomy or devolution of powers during his Independence Day address this week, should come as no surprise. Despite the international community's periodic calls on Sri Lanka not to squander its military victory, but use it to negotiate a lasting political settlement, the Sri Lankan state has stubbornly continued to do quite the reverse. Although some international observers remain bewildered by Sri Lanka's stance, in truth key political figures of successive Sri Lankan governments have never shied away from making their fundamental rejection of Tamil political power abundantly clear. The writing was always on the wall; it is time that those who truly want to see stability and peace, read it.
When the international community chose to support Sri Lanka's military offensive against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in 2008, it was not ignorant of the destruction that was to come. However, adamant that it was the LTTE that was the true barrier to peace and stability on the island, heavy civilian casualties were said to be a price worth paying in order to defeat 'terrorism'. Even as the fighting progressed and irrefutable evidence of intentional targeting of civilians came to light, the pursuit of the end goal was still considered to justify turning a blind eye to Sri Lanka's means. For it was argued that following a military victory, the government would reach out to the Tamils and work towards a political settlement that acknowledged their legitimate aspirations. This analysis of the conflict was mistaken.
Almost four years on, despite the military defeat of the LTTE, the absence of armed conflict, the abundance of international economic and developmental aid, a government that enjoys overwhelming support, and a major Tamil party that has proved itself only too willing to engage in dead-end dialogue, the elusive political solution to the conflict is no closer. American and Indian calls on the Sri Lankan government to engage in talks with the TNA and work towards a lasting political solution, have proved futile, and international pressure has only served to further unmask the Sri Lankan state's unwillingness to share power in any meaningful way with the Tamils. 
Routinely making a mockery of several international figures, the Sri Lankan government has spun its rhetoric of reconciliation and negotiations to visiting diplomats, whilst simultaneously, publicly asserting that it has no intention to devolve power or see the implementation of the paltry 13th Amendment. No sooner had the Indian External Affairs Secretary Salman Khurshid left than Sri Lanka's Minister of Agriculture Udaya Gammanpila rejected devolution and the Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa embarked on his campaign to abolish the 13th Amendment. The support his campaign enjoyed was widespread, from Buddhist clergy to a body of professionals. Whilst the failure of the opposition UNP, civic society institutions or the Sinhala media to meaningfully challenge it, is particularly poignant. Similarly, Rajapaksa's remarks this week remain unchallenged by the Sinhala masses. This silence or apathy cannot be attributed to fear. As recent large-scale Sinhala condemnation of the impeachment of the Chief Justice has proven, an authoritarian and repressive Rajapaksa regime does not prevent a Sinhala outcry when the sentiment is present. In short the government is able to defiantly pursue its restructuring of the North-East and its defiance of international calls to negotiate, because its rejection of Tamil political power and autonomy enjoys tangible support from the overwhelming majority of the Sinhala nation. 
A victory bought at an unthinkable and catastrophic human cost has, far from yielding the desired result, been exploited by the Sri Lankan state to consolidate its vision of Sinhala Buddhist hegemony – and it shows no signs of relenting. What was long purported to bring equality, peace and security, has exposed the Tamil nation and its traditional homeland to unchecked Sinhalisation, militarisation and the forcible suppression of Tamil political aspirations. Through the subjugation of the Tamil identity and the forced dilution of the cultural and ethnic make-up of the North-East, the Sri Lankan state is working systematically to construct a North-East that would undermine the Tamil nation's right to self-determination and claim the area as its homeland. In this context, continuing to “encourage the TNA and [the Sri Lankan] government to make serious progress” as the British Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt did this week, is hollow and absurd. These are not the deeds of a government serious about equal rights, let alone devolution or autonomy. It is high time that tacit encouragement and closed door diplomacy be replaced with decisive action and tangible repercussions.
Courtesy-Tamil Guardian
Reconciliation Commission recommendations cannot be implemented instantly, states Keheliya.


 Saturday , 09 February 2013
Reconciliation Commission's recommendations cannot be implemented urgently for anybody's insistence.
Cannot function in the improper manner for any body's requirement was said by Cabinet spokesperson Keheliya Rambukelle.
He made this statement at the journalist conference held to notify the cabinet decisions.
He said, that the settlement for the 30 year crisis cannot acquire within three years. However, mostly settlements are met for short term crisis. Government functions carefully concerning the intermediary and long term crisis.
 I have already given information concerning the implementation of the Learnt Lessons and Reconciliation Commission's recommendations at the Cabinet.
The short term activities, middle level activities, future decisive operations are the four types. 30 years’ war was continued in the country, and from the period independence was granted, problems continued.
At that time, concerning this crisis it was discussed at the Cabinet. This is not today, yesterday problem which should be understood by everyone. Concerning this, cannot function in haste in a wrong manner in the way everyone states.
 Due to this reason, this crisis was given to the responsibility of Learnt Lesson and Reconciliation Commission.  We did not appoint this Commission for anybody's pressure.
Government identified a necessity for this and this Commission was appointed. The recommendation of this appointed Commission is now getting implemented.
Government at anywhere did not mention by obtaining this recommendation report will implement immediately in one day.
Government is functioning with much attention in this matter. However cannot find a decision to all the problems within two or three years.
Hence the short term crises which can be settled are mostly implemented. The middle level problems are now concentrated was said by him.
Saturday , 09 February 2013


Recommendations To Promote Reconciliation With Regard To Conflict Related Problems

By Rajiva Wijesinha -February 9, 2013 
Prof Rajiva Wijesinha
Colombo TelegraphThough the Reconciliation meetings I attended were confined to Divisional Secretariats in the North and East, the concerns looked at previously were general. In addition there were concerns relating to the conflict situation, in some instances affecting Sinhala communities too.
Chief amongst these were problems about land title. The LLRC Action Plan highlights the importance of dealing with these, reflecting the anxiety of all communities in this regard.
Another area of concern was livelihoods. This was of particular concern to Tamil communities in the North, reflecting the deprivation many suffered during the conflict. This means they have difficulty taking advantage of the opportunities created by the impressive programme of infrastructural development development government has undertaken.
Third is the problem of psycho-social support, which is minimal in the North. The traumas of war are compounded by uncertainties about those whose fate is not known for certain. In addition individuals of different ages in single parent families are also affected by economic and social factors.
Finally, while the commitment of the government to multilingualism is clear, putting this into practice has proved difficult because of a lack of personnel with bilingual and trilingual capacity, while translation skills are in extremely short supply. Teaching of the second language in schools is rare because there are insufficient teachers, and the Education Ministry is not in a position to increase the supply, even were the urgency understood.
I will present here the recommendations I have put forward with regard to the first two issues discussed above, with the rest to follow.
Land Issues
  1. Promised amendments to the Circular issued last year, which should by and large resolve many problems but has been challenged in Court, should be made and a new draft put forward to expedite the settlement of the cases.
  2. As surveying of lands for the distribution of deeds takes time because of a lack of trained personnel, the Survey Department should as a matter of urgency deploy teams headed by trained personnel, together with suitable trainees, to expedite the finalization of plans.
  3. As there is uncertainty in Divisional Secretariats about the instructions to be followed, the Ministry of Lands should clarify the position, and issue a new Circular that makes clear the provisions that now obtain.
  4. There should be no delays in formally taking over lands required for official purposes and paying appropriate compensation. While government must affirm the principle that acquisition of lands for national purposes, of which security is an essential component, is within the powers of government, minimizing such acquisitions and providing adequate compensation promptly is essential for such powers to prove acceptable. Agencies involved in surveying lands to be acquired, and fixing compensation, should work expeditiously, and with sympathetic understanding of the needs of those who will be dispossessed.
Livelihoods
  1. Vocational programmes based on the needs of people in the North should be started on an extensive scale, with attention also to marketing and value addition with regard to agricultural produce. Entrepreneurship training should be conducted, along with soft skills to enhance employability both in Sri Lanka and abroad.
  2. Service delivery should be by a range of institutions, including the military on the lines of the vocational training institutes the Pakistan army has developed, for both soldiers about to retire and members of the community where they are posted.
  3. Schools should be used for this purpose too, as suggested in the latest proposals for education reform put forward by the Parliamentary Consultative Committee on Education.

Sri Lanka: Plan of action proposed by the Army Board on Implementation of the Recommendations of the Lessons Learnt & Reconciliation Commission


SRI LANKA BRIEF
Highlights:—Full report is here 

Disappearance: to appoint an Army Board of Inquiry to investigate fully the instances referred to in Chapter 4  of LLRC report
C 4 video: Board of Inquiry to investigate the matter fully in order to clear the good name of the Sri Lanka Army and also to bring any offenders ( of creating the video), to justice.
Civilians killed : The  so called civilian casualties are mainly consisted of LTTE cadres killed in combat, civilians killed by LTTE for political and other reasons and civilians killed by LTTE whilst attempting to flee LTTE held areas.
Accountability: Impose mandatory legal obligations on non-state actors to observe Rules of War, the role of International Humanitarian Agencies (ICRC, MSF etc) in Internal war situations etc.
Para Military: The Government has already disarmed/rehabilitated exmilitants groups
Human Rights:The S.L. Constitution and the existing legal framework are adequate to safeguard the HRs
Militarisation: The Military Civil Affairs Officers attached to formation headquarters should continue to function as liaison officers to assist the civil authorities to implement Nation Building Projects. The police are in total control and Armed Forces are confined to static duties at key points. 
Policing: The Police in Sri Lanka should be placed under the Ministry of Defence at all times
23. In formulating its recommendations, the Board took into account inter alia the following;
a. The obligation to educate the members of the Armed Forces in HR Law and IHL.
b. Measures to safeguard civilians and to avoid civilians casualties during Military Operations.
c. The importance of the Tamil Language not only as a medium of
communication but also as part of Counter Terrorist / Counter Insurgency Doctrine.
d. The need to produce quality soldiers in the post-war scenario.
e. Recommendations made by the LLRC to investigate the specific instances referred to at Chapter 4 of the LLRC Report.
f. Recommendations made by LLRC to establish the truth or otherwise of the allegations arising out of Channel 4 Video footage referred to at Chapter 4 of the LLRC Report.
24. The Board has restricted its recommendations to those areas which the Armed Forces alone could implement leaving the other areas to relevant state agencies concerned.
 HUMANITARIAN LAW ISSUE : ACTION PLAN PROPOSED BY THE ARMY BOARD      
Highlights:—Full report is here 



Lankan President's visit rocks Tirumala
The temple town of Tirupati saw angry protests by political workers from Tamil Nadu, who converged in thousands to oppose Rajapaksa’s visit.

TNN | Feb 9, 2013
TIRUPATI/CHENNAI: The arrival of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa to Buddhist and Hindu shrines in the country on Friday was greeted by protests from Tamils everywhere, from Bodh Gaya to Tirupati, with one man arrested for trying to immolate himself in Chennai where the protests were led by DMK patriarch M Karunanidhi.
The temple town of Tirupati saw angry protests by political workers from Tamil Nadu, who converged in thousands to oppose Rajapaksa’s visit. Nearly 2,500 protesters, who dubbed Rajapaksa anti-Tamil, were arrested throughout the day by the Chittoor police with section 144 in force to prevent violence. Rajapaksa is scheduled for a darshan ofLord Venkateshwara early Saturday morning before leaving for Colombo.

Alerted by Tamil Nadu intelligence wing that Tamil outfits will stage protests against the Lankan president, Chittoor police had thrown a security blanket from the airport at Renigunta to the temple town from Friday morning. Throughout the day, even as Tamil Nadu politicians shouted slogans against Rajapaksa in Chennai, hundreds of political workers descended on the town.

One poster carried by the protesters said “Chase out destroyer of 2076 Hindu temples, killer of Hindu temple priests.”

The situation remained tense even when the Lankan President landed at Renigunta airport at 5.40 pm and proceeded in a convoy to a guest house in Tirumala for the night stay. About 20 Tamil protesters were arrested near Tirumal Bhavan when they tried to obstruct the presidential convoy while another 50 activists were arrested in front of the DSP’s office when they burnt Rajapaksa’s effigy.

Unprecedented security arrangements were made across the 15-km road from the airport leading to Alipiri and the 18-km long hill route leading to Tirumala. According to temple officials, Rajapaksa would offer prayers and take part in the ‘Suprabhatha’ Seva at 3 am, Saturday. He will return to Renigunta airport and take off for Colombo at 9.30 am.

The DMK, a key UPA ally, and other members of the Tamil Eelam Supporters’ Organisation (TESO) staged a demonstration in Chennai. Karunanidhi charged Rajapaksa government with destroying Tamil art, culture, literature and language in the island nation. Tamil names of Lankan villages have been renamed in Sinhala, he said and exhorted the pro-Tamil groups to teach Rajapaksa a fitting lesson.

M Panja Murthy, 35, doused himself in kerosene and attempted self-immolation in front of Raj Bhavan in Chennai on Friday morning in protest against the visit of Rajapaksa. But the policemen at the governor’s residence pounced on him and stopped him before he set himself ablaze

The Question Of Militarisation In Post-War Sri Lanka

BAhilan Kadirgamar -February 9, 2013 
Ahilan Kadirgamar
Colombo Telegraph“Only under the second Bonaparte does the state seem to have made itself completely independent. As against civil society, the state machine has consolidated its position so thoroughly that the chief of the Society of December 10 suffices for its head, an adventurer blown in from abroad, raised on the shield by a drunken soldiery, which he has brought with liquor and sausages, and which he must continually ply with sausage anew. Hence the downcast despair, the feeling of most dreadful humiliation and degradation that oppresses the breast of France and makes her catch her breath. She feels dishonoured. And yet the state power is not suspended in midair. Bonaparte represents a class, and the most numerous of French society at that, the small-holding peasants.” — Karl Marx
“In the case of a Bonapartist dictatorship, the state does not need a serious popular support to the extent a fascist one does, because its function is to serve in the long run the interests of the dominant class by playing upon the dynamic of the fundamental contradiction itself. Thus it allows for the existence of legal political struggle which it favours and directs accordingly.” — Nicos Poulantzas
The military is prominent in the image and discourse of Sri Lanka within and without the country. This is in part due to the military’s decisive victory over the LTTE, but also an effect of its continued prominent presence in the country as well as the continuing war crimes debate in international media and forums. Yet there is little clarity by what is meant by militarisation. Is it the consolidation of the power of the military as an entity? Is it a process of significant change in the relationship between the military and the regime, the state and society? Or is it a process of increasing securitisation of state institutions and society? How is a security consciousness including the inculcation of military discipline in society related to state power and the politics of the regime? These are important questions when thinking about militarisation. However, the absence of conceptual clarity and the lack of a debate on militarisation in post-war Sri Lanka have hindered nuanced analysis of militarisation. This article attempts to raise some questions about the relationship of the military to the ruling regime, state, economy and society as well as the processes of securitisation in Sri Lanka. This article is both a call for and premised on the importance of bringing class back into a much needed debate on militarisation.
“War on Terror”, Security and Development                          Read More

Nursing trainee sexually abused by doctor in intensive care

SATURDAY, 09 FEBRUARY 2013 
logoA student at the Nursing Training College sexually abused by a doctor in Kurunegala Hospital has been admitted to Chilaw Hospital in a critical condition.
A spokesman for Chilaw Hospital said the student had been sent to Chilaw Hospital without admitting her to Kurunegala Hospital to conceal information.
The nursing trainee who visits Kurunegala Hospital for training had been asked to come to eh hospital on the 7th Later she had been sexually abused by the doctor but she had not been able to complain regarding eh incident to anyone.
The girl in a critical state is being treated at ICU of Chilaw Hospital.

Nearly one million farmers denied their pension

logoSATURDAY, 09 FEBRUARY 2013 
More than 95,500 farmers have not received farmers’ pension for more than a year as the farmers’ pension fund has been annulled.
More than 9,59,000 farmers have contributed to the farmers’ pension scheme and 95,500 farmers who had reached the age of 60 were receiving the pension.
The Director General of Farmers’ Pension Scheme Panduka Weerasinghe  confirming the unavailability of funds to pay pensions for farmers says the issue cropped up due to increasing the monthly pension of Rs.200 to Rs.1000.
He says despite receiving Rs.4 million for the farmers’ pension scheme, the pensioners have to be paid about Rs.125 million a month. This has caused the crisis he points out.
Court orders to arrest officials of Ghandhi home. But none arrested so far.

Kilinochchi District Magistrate court ordered to arrest the suspected persons to conduct immediate investigations connected with the incident of harassing the children cared at the Kilinochchi Ghandhi children home.
 
Destitute children who were identified by the courts that they do not have parents and guardians were given shelter and cared at the Ghandhi center.
 
In this state in last January 24th, night, about 13 children from the said children’s home was beaten and harassed by the officials hence, a case was filed at the Kilinochchi district court through the Kilinochchi police.
 
Children's Probation officers visited the children’s home after they came to know about the incident, and conducted investigation concerning this on January 29th, and filed a case in courts.
 
The complaint was taken for inquiry by the Kilinochchi district Magistrate I.M.Vaakapdeen and he ordered to produce the suspected persons connected with this incident in courts on forthcoming 15th.
 
On last Saturday night a boy  from the children’s home  was again harassed as he had leaked information to outsiders and was sent out of the home at 8.30 p.m.
 
 
The affected boy had notified this incident to the Children’s Probation Office and he  was produced before the Magistrate I.M.Vaakdeen on last 5th.
 
In his statement, he informed that “he was enrolled to the Ghandhi children home according to court order. On last Saturday the home care takers  assaulted and threatened me.  Like me other children also have been affected and are in the state of committing suicide”.
 
Considering the boy's statement, and to expedite investigations concerning the ongoing incidents, Magistrate ordered the  Kilinochchi police station Officer in Charge to arrest the suspected persons and produce in courts.
 
Further a copy of his order to be forwarded to the Kilinochchi Deputy Police Superintendent for adequate action.  But until yesterday, concerning this incident none were arrested by police is according to sources. 
Saturday , 09 February 2013
Inaction on CJs

By Gihan Kamalesh Weerasinghe and Ariyaratna Ganegoda

2013-02-09
The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) is yet to reach a decision on the complaints put forward against Chief Justice Mohan Peiris and impeached Chief Justice
Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake, Chairman of the Commission, Jagath Balapatabendi, said.


A former Supreme Court Judge, Balapatabendi, said the report of the Investigation Unit, which had made inquiries into the complaints against former Chief Justice Bandaranayake, had not been handed over to the Commission yet.
Legal action against the ousted CJ can be made only after the Commission receives the report of the investigations carried out against her.
Balapatabendi also said no decision has been made with regard to the complaints made against current CJ Mohan Peiris.


Out of the 53 complaints received against top government officials during the last five months, the Commission has conduct 24 successful raids, Director-General, Lukshmi Jayawickrama told Ceylon Today. She said the Commission has arrested and, proceeding with investigations on seven police officials, four wildlife officers, a deputy commissioner of the Inland Revenue Department, a Pradeshiya Sabha member and a top Customs official.
According to Jayawickrama, all the suspects have been caught red handed while obtaining cash inducements.

Not natural deaths – official

By Gihan Kamalesh Weerasinghe-2013-02-09


The skeletal remains found in the mass grave at the Matale Hospital premises do not belong to people who had died due to natural causes, as their arms and legs appear to have been severed and the bodies buried in a haphazard manner, a senior police official said.


According to a Judicial Medical Officer (JMO), who was part of the excavation team at the site, the grave shows signs of mass killings, but it is yet to be determined the time period the killings had taken place. He also said the remains may need to be sent to the US for further analysis. However, archaeological investigations have revealed the skeletal remains are not older than 100 years.


Politburo member of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), Anura Kumara Dissanayake, claimed recently the remains in the mass grave belong to the youth killed during the 88-89 insurrection. 

Schoolgirl’s plight puts authorities in a spot


Rs 619 Million Public Funds Fraud Case Against Mohan Peiris And PB Jayasundara: The Lawyer Was Threatened

By Mudliyar -
The former Attorney General Mohan Peiris, the Finance Ministry Secretary PB Jayasundara and the Colombo Dockyard Company Ltd finally achieved their goal with the withdrawal of the lawyer, Nagananda Kodituwakku, from a case due to threats to his life which he had reported to the Inspector General of  Police and the British High Commission before returning to the UK.  This case would never have come to such an end, had the Supreme Court taken a firm stand and refused the applications made for postponement and instead subjected the conduct of Mohan Peiris and PB Jayasundara to judicial scrutiny, upholding the judicial power its exercise that emanates from the people.
PB and Mohan
This case due to come up before the Supreme Court tomorrow, effectively challenges the integrity and honesty of the then Attorney General Mohan Peiris (who is cited in his personal capacity) and the Secretary to the Ministry of Finance, PB Jayasundara, for their alleged misconduct and abuse of office held in trust. And the Petitioner challengers  with plausible evidence presented before the Court that both of them are directly responsible denying the government of public funds to the tune of over 619 million rupees defrauded by the Colombo    Read More
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Schoolgirl’s plight puts authorities in a spot

SATURDAY, 09 FEBRUARY 2013
Justice Ministry Secretary Kamalini De Silva yesterday faulted the police and the acting Magistrate with regard to the unfortunate incident where a 13-year-old schoolgirl was produced in court by the Horana Police on charges of having stolen eight coconuts.

The teenager was later granted bail on a Rs.50,000 surety

Ms. De Silva said that in the first place the girl should have been referred to the Mediation Board instead of being produced in Court.

“The law says that if the accused is a minor (aged 18 or less) and the case productions is worth Rs.5,000 or less, the matter should have necessarily be referred to the Mediation Board and this has not happened here which is unfair to the girl,” she said.It was alleged that the girl had stolen the coconuts to find the Rs.800 asked for by her school authorities to colour wash the classroom. She had done so as her parents were poor and unable to find the money.
Ms. De Silva said the Mediation Board Act was amended about two years ago to include this clause and it appears that the Police and the Magistrate might have been unaware about this amendment.  

“However, the Police have been educated on the matter and it was sad that the girl was produced in courts and released on bail,” Ms. De Silva said.

Meanwhile, police spokesman Prishantha Jayakody said according to section 367 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the case could not be referred to the Mediation Board as the girl had committed an offence for which police bail could not be given.

Mr. Jayakody blamed the media for giving “out of proportion publicity” to the incident.

Meanwhile, government media spokesman and Minister Keheliya Rambukwella said the case was discussed in the cabinet on Thursday and President Rajapaksa instructed Education Minister Bandula Gunawardana to conduct an inquiry.The minister said the teachers and the principals cannot ask students to pay for painting classrooms.

“We cannot take action against school authorities as it is a matter dealt by the Public Service Commission (PSC). There are instances where the PSC crosses our path when we attempt to take disciplinary action against errant public servants,” the minister said.

He the President had directed that justice be done to the girl.( Sandun A. Jayasekera)