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 16, 2013


Saturday , 16 February 2013
Buddhist movements forum has mailed handbills to  50 Muslim traders located in the Kurunagal Narammal locality giving them death threats.

The handbills read as, " Thambiya(a slang word used to call Muslims) before end of March month, pack and leave your shops or you will have to face death"

Due to this reason the Muslim businessmen located in the Narammala locality are living in fear of death and this has caused tension in the area.

 The said traders have made complaints to the Naarammala police and also have made complaint to the Special Police Unit which handles crisis.

Concerning this incident, Kurunagal district Sri lanka Freedom party Organizer and  Kurunagal Urban Council member Abdul Shathaar in detail explained and said, for the past many years Muslim people are living in the Kurunagal Narammala locality. There are about 50 Muslim businessmen.

On last Monday through post 50 handbills were received. These bills are mailed by a Buddhist movement forum. The wordings in the handbill are given below:

"Thambiyaa,  you are exploiting  our peoples money through Halal, and if you don't leave your outlets before the end of March month, you will face death....

Concerning this we made complaints to the Narammala Police station and the special police unit which handles crisis regarding religion. They notified concerning this investigation will be conducted.

Meanwhile on last Monday night, six Muslim shops at Kuruvikoduva area located at Narammala were damaged. Two Muslim who had gone for religious obligations, were assaulted by unidentified persons. Concerning this also we have lodged a complaint to the police.

This crisis is not carried out by the Buddhist monks and Buddhist from the Kurunagal district. This is a conspiracy carried out by those from outside districts.

Hence concerning this issue, we expect to hold discussions with Buddhist Bhikkus from the Kurunagal district. We are discussing with defense officials was mentioned by him.

14 murders at Kahawatta committed by UPFA henchmen

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SATURDAY, 16 FEBRUARY 2013
It has been revealed that 14 of the 15 murders of women committed at Kotakethana in Kahawatta Police Division have been carried out by the same organized gang.
According to what has been revealed the drug racketeers who were with the Member of Godakawela Pradeshiya Sabha Dharmasiri and his brother Raju are responsible for the wave of murders of women in the area. It is revealed that ‘Malu Raja’ and Abhaya Priyantha have committed the crimes hiding behind political power of Dharmasiri and Raju.
The investigators have found out that all the murders have been carried out by hacking the victims and the murderers had changed their pattern of murder to mislead investigators.
The wave of murders had begun to fulfill sexual instincts and to take revenge. However, it had taken a political appearance later.


Leave DIG Latheef Alone!



By Malinda Seneviratne -February 16, 2013 

Malinda Seneviratne
Colombo TelegraphAbout a year ago, a highly respected police officer, previously attached to the STF but at the time the Officer in Charge of the Crimes Division of the Wellawaya Police, died under tragic and mysterious circumstances.  DIG Dinana was known to have been an uncompromising fighter against cannabis (ganja) growers and traffickers.  He led a team of men 20km deep into the Hambegamuwa jungles and while destroying a ganja chena, according to ‘witnesses’ had been taken unawares by a falling tree, lost balance and fallen on the alavanguva he had been holding.  The heavy, pointed iron rod is said to have gone in through his neck and out from the other side of his head.
Now, that is a tall story if ever there was one.  Drugs is a big business and especially in this particular area.  If bucks control politics then it is quite possible that both politicians as well as state authorities come under pressure to ‘let be’.  One year later, another officer who too has declared war on drugs in the area, DIG Moneragala, N.I.R. Latheef, is coming under fire from local politicians.  Is there a connection? We cannot say for sure.
One thing is certain.  DIG Latheef has spared no pains to combat illegal treasure hunting, drugs and illegal sand mining.   He has had to contend with politician-backers of those engaged in illegal activities.  He has stood firm.  So too has IGP N. K. Illangakoon, also formerly of the STF, who has strongly defended measures taken by the Moneragala Police.
Appointments, promotions, transfers, suspensions and termination are often based on political considerations.  Police officers are promoted or transferred as reward and punishment, respectively, before and after elections. That’s been common practice by ruling parties over the last several decades.  ‘Loyalty’ is noted.  Its lack is not unnoticed.  At the local level there are instances where honest officers are considered a nuisance.  Those who are blind and those who are happy to look away are clearly preferred by errant politicians or those whose political future is dependent on wrongdoers who fund their election campaigns.
The same goes for other officials.  A casual threat works most times.  Lubrication too.  When these things don’t yield desired results, then ‘transfer’ is an option.  Vilification also works. There are many ways to harass.
DIG Latheef is not running for political office.  He seems to be a decent police officer.  He seems to be doing his job.  When an honest police officer does his job the only people who can get hot under the collar are those who are dishonest and crooked.  When cries are raised for the lynching of a good officer, then it is prudent to investigate the doings of the criers.
The politicians, ‘duty bound’ perhaps, are now clamoring for Latheef’s transfer.  They will leave no stone unturned, they say.  They will protest, they will petition. Police officers are not politicians.  They have to do their duty, and some of them die in the line of duty.  They cannot purchase politicians and they cannot purchase supporters.  Sure, not all of them are exactly saints for there are innumerable occasions when officers have been caught napping and more, but there cannot be any doubt that the Latheefs of the Police Department need to be supported. And protected.  If politicians will not, the people must.
*Malinda Seneviratne is the Chief Editor of ‘The Nation and his articles can be found at www.malindawords.blogspot.com

GTF’s 3rd Anniversary Conference, in the House of Parliament

Saturday, 16 February 2013 
To mark the third anniversary of inauguration, Global Tamil Forum (GTF) is hosting a Conference to highlight thecurrent ground realities in Sri Lanka.This will be presented by a cross-section of international speakers, who will share their perspectives on a global platform in theHouses of Parliament, Committee Room 14, on Wednesday 27 February 2013, from 10am-5pm.
Registration is compulsory as spaces are limited and an invitation will be required for you to gain entry. Please see below, or on the 2nd page of the attached invite, on how to register.
The first ever UK preview of ‘No Fire Zone’, the third film in the Sri Lanka Killing Fields’ series, will be introduced and screened, on the day, by its Director Callum Macrae. It is a meticulous and chilling expose of some of the worst war crimes and crimes against humanity of recent times - told through the extraordinary personal stories of a small group of characters and also through some of the most dramatic and disturbing video evidence ever recorded. Footage which is nothing less than direct evidence of war crimes, summary execution, torture and sexual violence. The full documentary will be screened in Geneva during the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) Session, and then following this will be presented in India and the United States. A documentary showing the situation of women in the Vanni, produced by M C M Iqbal, will also be previewed at the event.
Hon. R Sampanthan MP, leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), and Hon. MA Sumanthiran MP, the TNA National List MP and human rights lawyer, will be presenting ground realities, joined by a cross-section of non-Tamil speakers.
Hon. Cde Yasmin Sooka, one of the UN Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts on Sri Lanka and Executive Director of the Foundation for Human Rights in South Africa, will be sharing her experiences and expertise on the recommendations of the Panel’s 2011 report and the role that truth and accountability play in genuine reconciliation.
International Human Rights Law Professor William Schabas, who appeared on the first Killing Fields documentary, will speak on the case forwar crimes investigation and prosecution. He will be joined by Prof. Joshua Castellino, Head of Law Department at Middlesex University, and Dr. Elvira Dominguez Redondo, whose expertise includes Human Rights, the United Nations, International Law and Responsibility to Protect (R2P). Other academics include Dr. Manivannan, an Associate Professor and Sri Lanka specialist at the University of Madras, in India.
Ms Yolanda Foster of Amnesty International will discuss their “UNHRC submission on Human Rights in Sri Lanka”, at this event and Human Rights Watch will be distributing a report on “Sexual Violence” being published by them on the same day. International Crisis Group will be advocating a new report “Sri Lanka’s Authoritarian Turn”, which will be published in the week prior to the Conference.
Mr Peter Kellner, Chair of the Royal Commonwealth Society, journalist and leading political commentator, will be presenting the Commonwealth perspective and Sri Lanka’s relevance ahead of CHOGM 2013.
Deputy Prime Minister and Leader of the Liberal Democrats Rt. Hon Nick Clegg MP, Senior Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and former Conservative Party Chairman, Rt. Hon Baroness Warsi, Leader of the Opposition and Labour Leader, Rt. Hon Ed Miliband MP, Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change , Rt. Hon Ed Davey MP, and the Shadow Foreign Secretary, Rt. Hon Douglas Alexander MP, will speak at the event and will be joined by a number of cross party MPs.
Rt. Hon David Miliband MP, former British Secretary of State for Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs, will be sharing his views via a video message. He visited Sri Lanka in the final months of the country’s armed conflict in 2009. Hon. Mr Erik Solheim, Chair of the OECD Development Assistance Committee, former Minister in the Norwegian Cabinet and main negotiator in the peace process in Sri Lanka, will speak. In addition to our guest speakers, Foreign Ministry representativesfrom voting countries of the UNHRC will also be attending as observers.
Members of the International Relations team of the African National Congress (ANC), including Hon. Cde Sisa Njikelana MP, will attend.
Award-winning Indian journalists in the mainstream Indian TV Channels, who were the prime movers in the media campaign ahead of the UN resolution in March ‘12, will also be present.
We would greatly welcome your presence and participation at this notable event.
Registration is compulsory as spaces are limited and an invitation will be required for you to gain entry. We would be grateful if you could confirm your attendance as soon as possible by sending your name in full toinfo@globaltamilforum.org by no later than Friday 22 February, so you can receive a personalised invitation before the day. We look forward to hearing from you and meeting you on the Wednesday 27 February.
Global Tamil Forum
The inaugural meeting of the GTF took place in the British Parliament, on 24th February 2010, with an array of parliamentarians, including the then British Foreign Secretary of State and Shadow Foreign Secretary, Rt. Hon David Miliband MP and Rt. Hon William Hague MP, joining other international delegates and civil society leaders in a momentous show of support for the Tamil people. Members from the delegation were also invited to meet with the then British Prime Minister, Rt. Hon Gordon Brown MP and the three-day conference was closed by Rev. Jesse Jackson, the veteran US human rights campaigner.
Since inauguration, GTF has been continuing its campaign to engage with the international community to highlight the continuing persecution of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka, to seek justice for the victims and work towards a durable political solution that will bring lasting peace between all communities on the island. This event aims to bring together political and non-political representatives and activists from the Tamil, Sinhala and Muslim communities in Sri Lanka and Diaspora, as well as senior delegates from the international community, Government Ministers, representatives from international human rights groups, journalists and academics to share their perspectives and keep Sri Lanka firmly on the global agenda.

Recent Militarization Of Sri Lankan Life: The Elephant In The Room!

By Emil van der Poorten -February 16, 2013

Emil van der Poorten
Colombo TelegraphWriting about militarization in Sri Lanka is a challenging task because the subject seems to grow exponentially as one begins to explore it.  The more I examined the subject, no matter how cursorily, the bigger the elephant in the room became!  And this was before I even considered examining the new military-run commercial enterprises which I was told were growing like Jack’s Beanstalk in Sri Lanka’s north and east.
Overview
I claim no particular expertise with regard to the militarization of commerce and industry in places like Egyptbefore the Arab Spring to compare and contrast our reality with what was theirs.  However, even a cursory examination suggests that Sri Lanka is well on its way to establishing an empire with its own complexion – an umbilical connection between what passes for Sri Lanka’s 21st Century version of a mediaeval Royal Family, the Rajapaksas, and the armed forces.  That tie-in is reinforced by the fact that the President is the Commander in Chief of the armed forces and his brother, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, by virtue of his position as Secretary of Defence & Urban Development, a veritable “chairman of the board” and the chief executive officer of this military/business empire. Another brother, Basil Rajapaksa, is the czar of “economic development,” and enjoys an unprecedented level of power with little accountability in traditional democratic terms.  The military, while not overtly active in his areas of “enterprise,” is an ever-present reality for the security thereof.
The militarization of rugby
While cricket is considered “Sri Lanka’s Fifth Religion,” rugby, the game of “muddied oafs,” comes a respectable second in popularity to the sport of “flannelled fools” and has not been spared the reach of the Rajapaksas.  All three of the President’s sons play for the Sri Lanka Navy team and the second son has been made captain of the national team as well.  The Kandy Sports Club (KSC) team, which has won both the league and knockout tournaments during the past dozen years, has been targeted by the Navy, with assistance from the Air Force commander who was installed as head of the Sri Lanka Rugby Football Union (SLRFU) as a result of Presidential influence.  The Sri Lanka Air Force team has also been employed against the Kandy Team in a “defeat the common enemy at any cost” effort.  That this state of affairs was given “official sanction” was evident in that the SLRFU ignored every appeal for action by the teams victimized by the Navy and Air Force despite eye-witness and video evidence of the violence visited upon KSC players and spectators and those of other clubs. While the SLRFU is no longer headed by this man, his successor, allegedly a financial advisor to the Royal Family, also turned a blind eye to massive violence by navy personnel last year.  On August 8th, 2012, dozens of KSC supporters were hospitalized when a mob of better than 1200 Navy personnel, with tickets and transport paid for by the Navy, attacked anyone appearing to be a KSC supporter.  No punitive action was taken by the SLRFU, the navy authorities, or the police against any of these criminals!
The events of the past three years that culminated in that violence is very obviously a part of getting the message out that what the military (and the ruling family) wants it will get, irrespective of any rules that might seem to stand in their way .  Even when an Air Force player discharged an assault weapon on the field, during a game, no action was taken and there was not even an acknowledgement of the letter of complaint from the aggrieved club!  In addition, the local police chose not to take any action whatsoever to deal with this firearms offence, despite evidence – spent shell and video footage. This was the most dramatic of a series of acts of unbelievable thuggery unequalled by even the Lager Louts of European soccer a while back.  Even prior to this event, the violence had reached a stage when the Kandy Municipal Council passed a unanimous resolution condemning the violent conduct of Navy personnel. A KSC player, considered by many as one of the best three-quarters to have ever played rugby in Sri Lanka, was hospitalized after an on-field assault.  Apart from the SLRFU turning a Nelsonian eye on these transgressions, no action whatsoever has been taken by the police and, perhaps even more important, by the armed forces to deal with the criminal conduct of their men.
While the Sri Lanka Rugby Football Union was the most prominent example of military control of sports organizations, several of the other national sports bodies are headed up by service personnel.  Among these are the national athletics (track and field) organization and the apex organization for disabled athletes who compete in such as the Paralympics)
Rakna Arakshaka Lanka: building a private army
Rakna Arakshaka Lanka (RAL) is Sri Lanka’s version of the infamous Blackwater Security operation of the USA, simply, the beginnings of a private army. It symbolizes the extension of military control into activities usually treated as the preserve of corporate or state endeavour.
A visit to RAL’s website, with its emphasis on its intended capacity as a repository for ex-servicemen, is illuminating to say the least.  It has already been used as a resource to provide university students with military education in the name of “Leadership training” and has continued to repeat this exercise despite serious resistance to the entire concept and philosophy from educators.  It seems like no one is aware of Post-World War II history when compulsory military service for youth spawned an epidemic of violence epitomized by the infamous “Teddy Boys” in Britain.   “National Service” exacerbated a problem rather that provided a solution to it.
Also, the replacement of the companies providing security services in all the universities with RAL is simply an effort to militarise a civilian security function and intimidate potentially militant students.
This organization is the brainchild of retired Colonel Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, the President’s brother, with Maj. General (Ret.) Egodawela as its Chief Executive Officer.   In the matter of enhancing its information technology capacity, it has Leisha Chandrasena de Silva ,  past head of Sri Lanka Telecom in its upper echelons of management. The government’s intrusion into electronic communication, hacking internet communications and tapping phone lines in a manner unprecedented in Sri Lanka was raised by MP Mangala Samaraweera in Parliament.  I have myself documented my own experience of this nuisance in my column in The Sunday Leader of March 12th, 2011, appealing to those intercepting email communications between my daughter and grand-daughter in Canada and me not to do so.
RAL’s recruitment of de-mobilized servicemen might seem like a reasonable alternative to simply cutting loose on urban and rural Sri Lanka large numbers of those trained as killing machines.  However, the government has given no evidence of an interest in applying the time, expertise, and effort required to “de-program” such people emerging from traumatic circumstances.
While having soldiers clean drains and sell vegetables keeps them occupied and puts a benevolent and peaceful face on people who have proven ability as warriors, such pursuits cannot provide the excitement required to keep those fighters happy for too long!
There are also ongoing initiatives for RAL to enter into various facets of the hospitality industry.   A piece of this length does not permit an examination of the totality of the financial, ecological and other implications, of such initiatives.  However, the simple fact that people trained to ensure the military security of a nation are being utilized for commercial, profit-making enterprises should provide cause for concern by those concerned about democratic practice.
The Prospectus of RAL is so broad that it can create all kinds of “opportunities” for ex-servicemen with the only real challenge being to ensure that those “opportunities” fit in with the primary need to ensure the absolute, long-term authority of one family, keeping all such efforts away from public scrutiny.  The implications in the matter of accountability, responsibility and good governance in a democratic society are only too obvious.
In keeping with the basic Rajapaksa strategy of using a shotgun- rather than a laser-approach to dealing with needs, even secondary education has been invaded and selected school principals made Brevet Colonels.  I can do no better than quote from a recent release from the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) which reads, in part,
  “ ……Despite all protests by the public, the Secretary to the Ministry of Defence, who is retired lieutenant colonel of the Sri Lanka Army, a green card holder of the United States of America, and one of brothers of the President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, has appointed select school principals as “brevet colonels”…… This curious militarization of state schools, which involves selecting school principals after 10 days of armed training and appointing them as “brevet colonels”, may well have another agenda beyond the obvious. Control of the armed forces after the war, as well as the arrest of the former army chief, who led the country to victory, has been a debacle. Many veterans have been forced into retirement and the possibility of internal conflict hung in the air. The regime thus felt it had to think about, not only appointing a few yes men, but, also of destroying the dignity and power of the service.”
The enormity of the problem that this militarization represents is revealed in the simple fact that the budgets of the Defence and Urban Development sectors has gone up since the end of the protracted and expensive war against the LTTE and was anticipated to be the largest of all the budget allocations at nearly Rs. 290 Billion in 2013, an increase in excess of 25% from the year before.  Juxtaposed against the allocation of a mere Rs. 37.9 billion to all education (less than 2% of the national budget), it speaks volumes as to the direction that has been chosen for Sri Lanka.  Again to quote the AHRC “This is a numbers game in a country where more than 20 million people live, but 70% of the national budget is controlled by one family. ….In other words, the regime is engaging in methods that were used during the Nazism and Stalinism where education was none other than a tool of total social control. “
Conclusion
This is no less than a plan to build a para-military structure to solidify absolute control over a civilian population in peace-time.  Military coups usually occur when the civilian authority has pretty much abdicated its power to the military or deliberately begun the transfer of authority to that sector, something that we appear to be in the process of witnessing in Sri Lanka right now.  However, while Mohamed Naguib removed King Farouk of Egypt, he was soon replaced by Gamal Abdel Nasser. Similarly, Juan Peron in Argentine andAugusto Pinochet in Chile used other military men as stalking horses in their successful efforts to establish long-standing military dictatorships in their countries.  Those in this country taking Sri Lanka down the road to military dictatorship need to remember George Santayana’s admonition that, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

Friday, February 15, 2013


Sinhala language was taught during rehabilitation. Released university student notify.


Friday , 15 February 2013
“We are not aware why government stated rehabilitation. Government from the day we were detained taught us Sinhala language”, was the statement given by Jaffna university student union Secretary P.Dharshanth who was detained and released from the Welikanda camp. He was queried yesterday, to mention regarding the rehabilitation given during detention.

Concerning the rehabilitation and the incidents occurred during the two months period, he said, we were arrested last December 1st, early morning hours by the Terrorism Prevention Police and was taken to Vavuniya. We were detained at the Terrorism Prevention Police office for 10 days and were investigated.

CID interrogated us in many angles but we without fear in detail mentioned that students from the Jaffna University are not involved with politics.

We said only remembering our relations demised at the Tamil rights struggle, we lighted lamp in commemorating them. Further we were in a peaceful way held protest against the attacks by the forces towards the students. Meanwhile the students did not at any circumstances function instigating violence was mentioned by us.

Meanwhile the CID queried us whether we have any links with the liberation tigers located in foreign countries, and whether we took training in foreign lands. We said “no” for such questions.

At the same time, we did not say that Tamil Eelam Liberation tiger Prabakaran is living or we living in by his name to the CID.

We also wish to notify, during interrogation by the CID, we were not at all harassed. They did not beat us, did not kick us, without any torture they inquired us, which is true.

We were detained for 10 days at Vavuniya, and were transferred to Welikanda camp, and they said, we would be given rehabilitation.

We are not aware what the government gave us in the name of rehabilitation. During the two months period we were detained, most of the days we were taught Sinhala language. In between we were requested to attend the counseling sessions conducted for the former rebels by the government at the Welikanda Camp. Other than this, we did not have any other rehabilitation.

Former rebels who were there were given vocational trainings. We being the university students were provided facilities to learn. They provided us with tables and chairs. We studied the course references which our parents gave us.

We did not undergo any sort of torture even at Welikanda Rehabilitation camp.

Internally and in foreign countries many voiced for our release, protested and campaigned and gave pressure to the government and we have a duty to give our gratitude to all our beloved at this time was said by Tharshanth.

Military personals attacked people engage in hunger strike at Waligamam North
[ Friday, 15 February 2013, 08:49.08 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Military personals carried out brutal attack against people engage in hunger strike at Waligamam North, short while ago.
People together with politicians engage in hunger strike protest on demanding to release lands and resettle people at the high security zone in the Waligamam north.
Due to the attack tense situation reported in the area. However people were confident on their protest. According to the sources hunger strike protest commenced at 8.30 am this morning. Opposition leader Ranil Wickramasinghe was also present at this site.
More than thousands of people were present at this hunger strike protest. A group comprise with 6 members suddenly arrive to the location ordered people to evacuate from the site. On this time parliamentarians requested police officials to arrest the suspects cause disturbances to the peaceful protest.
However police personals have arrested a suspect and others were taken out by the military personals. Military personals carried out attack against secretary of the Mannippai Divisional Secretariat and the member of the Waligamam North Pradeshiya Sabaha.
(2nd Lead)
Opposition leader Ranil Wickramasinghe delivered special speech at the hunger strike protest currently underway in the Thelipalai area Jaffna. End of the speech group of unidentified personals carried out attack against people present at the hunger strike protest.
Journalist of the Uthayan news paper was also attacked and suspects have taken away his camera. Members of the Tamil National Alliance have field complaint on this alleged attack at the Thellipalai police station.
(3rd Lead)
TNA Jaffna district parliamentarian E.Sarawanabawan hold discussions with army and police personals on this attack.
Military personals have take away the "memory card" and return back the camera towards Uthayan news paper journalist.

“I paint their faces so as not to forget them”

Works by Yulanie Perumbadage, a Sri Lankan of Singhalese origin, are on show in Fribourg
Works by Yulanie Perumbadage, a Sri Lankan of Singhalese origin, are on show in Fribourg (swissinfo)
by Simon Bradley, swissinfo.ch
Feb 14, 2013 - 11:00
swissinfo.ch - Swiss Broadcasting CorporationYulanie Perumbadage, a Sri Lankan of Singhalese origin who lives in Schaffhausen, talks to swissinfo.ch about life as a politically engaged artist in exile. She and her husband were forced to flee the island in 2009.
A figure stretches its arms across the blue, grey and white canvas.

“This painting is entitled ‘Réveille’ [Awakening]. As a nation we must wake up again and seek reconciliation,” declared the petite artist.

A discreet smile flashes across Yulanie’s face, a happy contrast with the storm and chill wind whistling outside the LivrEchange cultural library in Fribourg.

The oil painting is part of her new exhibition being shown at the library until February 27 – a collection of evocative memories and political symbols.
“I paint to show what the war has done to Singhalese society,” she added.

The Singhalese constitute the largest ethnic group - three-quarters of the population or 15 million people – in Sri Lanka but there are many other ethnic minorities including Tamils and Muslims.

The 41-year-old was forced to flee the southeast Asian nation with her journalist husband in 2009 after they received growing threats. Employed as an art school teacher, Yulanie was also politically active and among her work had produced several anti-war paintings.

From 2006 as the Sri Lankan government increased pressure on the Tamils in the north and east, intellectuals, artists, opposition politicians and journalists also started to feel the heat.

“Members of groups with different ideas were pursued as enemies of the state and criminals who had to pay for their acts and were attacked in the streets. At the time you couldn’t write anything publicly against the war,” she explained.

Artists were under pressure, not just from the authorities but increasingly from Singhalese people.

“There were lots of incidents with school staff members and neighbours threatening me for being a traitor. My husband received lots of threatening phone calls and messages and he was put on a hit list. The first person on the list was killed,” she added.

With a heavy heart the couple fled their homeland for Switzerland leaving behind their families and friends.

“I realised that it was no longer possible to continue my artistic struggle for a better world in my own country,” she said.
Yulanie Perumbadage
Yulanie Perumbadage
(swissinfo)

Skype contact

Switzerland is now her home. Schaffhausen is a beautiful place, she says, and the people are very welcoming. She recently read an article that Switzerland was the best place to be born. But life here is not easy. The possibility of seeing her family again remains just a distant “dream”; they rely on Skype to stay in touch.

“Living in exile is very difficult. It’s an unspeakable feeling,” she continued. “When I came here I couldn’t figure out what was going on. But thanks to help from the asylum office I’ve regained courage and picked up my brush again.”

Colourful cubist portraits stare at us from the library wall.

“I live here with the memory of my friends and parents. I paint their faces so as not to forget them,” she said. Her calm demeanour masks her inner turmoil.

Curious upbringing

Yulanie was born into a family of school teachers in a rural area near Kurunegela in north-west Sri Lanka.

“I didn’t have a luxurious life but my parents always earned enough to cover our basic needs. When they got their salary it was their habit to always buy me a book,” she smiled.

She was a curious child and from a young age questioning life’s inequalities became second nature: why do the children living next door go to bed without any dinner? Why are local farmers in debt to rich landowners and mistreating their families?

But her teenage years were marked by left-wing and nationalist uprisings and the deaths of many young Singhalese, including many of her school friends, which deeply shocked her.

“I saw so many burning bodies on the roads. Earlier they’d been tortured to death and to dissuade others they were burned in public. This was the situation in southern Sri Lanka where the vast majority of Singhalese lived,” she commented.

Vermillion and crutches

Violence and the ugly physical and psychological consequences of the 26-year-old war between the government and the Tamil rebels would become recurrent themes in her work.

“I like using bright colours; vermillion is my favourite,” she added.

Large red canvases dominate the next space covered by hundreds of tiny crutches.

“Every year there were more and more people in the streets with crutches and prosthetic limbs. Behind their crutches I saw their sad stories. You can count all the numbers of people who suffered terrible war wounds, but the irremediable damage to society cannot be measured.”

In another image a pile of metal-and-plastic crutches lean against traditional paintings normally found in a Buddhist temple.

“After a soldier is killed their family gets financial support. Buddhist monks celebrated them as heroes and worshipped them. Any sadness was wiped out and replaced by a warrior-like enthusiasm. Many of my neighbours who I played with as a child are dead. Some I met in the street are without an arm or leg,” she noted.

“The war is officially over. But there is no winner and no peace. There are just people with crutches.”

From far away she still reflects on the political situation back in her homeland. And despite the distance imagines she can somehow make a difference to heal the wounds.

“I only have my pencil and brush as tools but I hope to build something here in Switzerland. I’m trying to work with Tamils and Swiss people to build up relations,” she concluded.