Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, February 20, 2013


Ethno- Religious Fascism And The R2P Trap: The Scenario

Colombo Telegraph
By Dayan Jayatilleka -February 20, 2013
Dr Dayan Jayatilleka
Reading reports of the recent manifestation in Maharagama, I cannot, as a political scientist, avoid the clear, decided conclusion that what we are witnessing is nothing less than the emergence of an ethno-religious fascist movement from the dark underside of Sinhala society. It is what the political philosophers Hannah Arendt and Reinhold Niebuhr (and more recently, Alan Wolfe) characterised as ‘political evil’. (Those who expend much polemical powder and shot identifying President Rajapaksa as a Hitleresque fascist, now have a real movement that fits the bill far more closely).
Just as fanatical ethnic or ethno religious movements came to the fore globally with the dawn of a uni-polar world following the collapse of the USSR and the larger socialist alternative, the Sri Lankan counterpart arises with the post-war uni-polarity of our political system and the vacuum left by the slow motion implosive collapse of the democratic opposition.
Looked at more closely, the concrete context of the emergence of this movement is constituted by the confluence of five factors:
  1. Benign tolerance, if not early patronage, on the part of the regime. A precursor of this phenomenon was the anti-Muslim propaganda conducted by a party which is a constituent of the government and which concurs with the current calls of the new militant movement. The fast risen high rise in a prime location in Colombo, which houses the extremist movement, also indicates access to patronage.
  2. The absence of an inclusionary, pluralist statesmanlike stance and discourse on the part of the nation’s political leadership, and a refusal to adopt such a stance. Instead a dominant ‘regime discourse’ of majoritarian militarism, which legitimises more militant spin-offs, spouting hate speech and blackmailing regime and state.
  3. The absence of a moderate nationalist and socially progressive, i.e. social democratic Opposition. The opposition is in the throes of a protracted ‘organic crisis’, defined by Antonio Gramsci as one in which the traditional social support base of a party deserts it. The organic crisis of the opposition is rooted in the inorganic/disorganic character of that Oppositional leadership and the non-emergence of an organic Opposition which represents “the collective will of the people-nation” (Gramsci).
  4. The tacit collusion of state authorities such as those of law enforcement, who do not investigate, still less crack down on extremist movements of the majoritarian character, because they have been signalled or socialised into thinking that the cultural policing of minorities and the imposition of majoritarian norms is in order, and is indeed their role and function.
  5. The weakening of the Left, by which I mean the JVP, by a three way split, one to the populist right, led by Wimal Weerawansa and the other to the radical left, the FSP/JAV and the sectarian inability of the JVP and FSP to form a united front or action bloc even if their future survival depends upon it (which it does).
I don’t know who is ‘behind’ the new movement nor what its motivations are, and do not care to speculate. What I can make is an educated guess at what the consequences of this religio-fascist surge will be. What then is the emerging scenario? The fuel is spreading on the ground and a single match, a single spark, a single incident however minor, could set off a violent clash, commencing a whole new cycle of conflict and polarisation. We Sinhalese and our fellow Muslim citizens will be psychologically separated and unable to look each other in the eye, just as our Tamil citizens and we are unable to even now.
The new Sinhala Buddhist radicalism will spawn Muslim radicalism in Sri Lanka, outflanking the moderate Muslim leaders and factions. Reactive Muslim radicalism will be a magnet for the global jihadi movement that is especially strong in South Asia. The residual LTTE elements will reach out to the Muslim radicals and a pooling of resources and division of labour –including access in Tamil Nadu–will enable each to mount operations against Sri Lanka, thereby ending the hard won peace that we now enjoy.
The Sri Lankan armed forces will be affected by the demoralisation that will set in among its many Muslim officers and men.
Sri Lanka will lose the support of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, representing a billion adherents and inclusive of states that staunchly supported Sri Lanka during decades of war.
Since the Sinhala Buddhist extremist surge is taking place in the absence of any sign of Islamic terrorist activity in Sri Lanka, the case would have been made before world opinion that it is not LTTE terrorism that was the cause of our tragedy but that Sinhala extremism caused LTTE terrorism. The separatist elements of the Tamil Diaspora could well point to Maharagama and say this is what happened to us; what was done to us, and now they are doing it to the Muslims who supported the state during the war against Tamil separatism. The moral-ethical blame would shift to the South and the Sinhalese.
The apprehensions of the other minorities, including the Catholics and Christians overall, would be heightened, because no one with any discernment would accept the gratuitous advice of the Sinhala Buddhist racists that the enemy are the Christian fundamentalists (i.e. the Evangelicals) and that the Catholics should mobilise against them. The attacks on churches of all denominations during Christmas 2003, the arrest of a nun belonging to the congregation of Mother Theresa, the burning of the statue of Mary and the conduct of the authorities in the aftermath (already the subject of a condemnatory communiqué by Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith) makes it clear that the Christians as a community will be and are already a target. The alienation of a minority which is a fragment of an influential global community of two billion will only help those who seek to isolate Sri Lanka and the Sinhalese.
Far from enabling Sri Lanka to portray and position itself as a new Israel, the new surge of anti-Muslim Sinhala Buddhist extremism will cement the arguments of those who have long attempted to catch Sri Lanka in the R2P trap. The Responsibility to Protect is based on the case that a state is unwilling or unable to protect its citizens or a significant section of its citizenry, from large scale violence tantamount to ethnic cleansing. While it is true that R2P requires a Security Council Resolution to be triggered, it is widely observable that interventions invoking R2P or proto-R2P arguments take place with no such authorisation.
The frog-in-the-well ‘strategic minds’ embedded within the Sinhala racist surge or manipulating it as a proxy, may think that an anti-Muslim stance will endear the Sinhalese, the state or the country to the West. These gentlemen and ladies do not seem to know that the West supported jihadis in Afghanistan against the USSR, and still do so in Libya and Syria—even against their own interests- when they are fighting against a state or regime that the West is inimical towards. The Sinhala racists also do not know that the West bombed Christian Serbs facilitating the birth of two Islamic majority states, Bosnia and Kosovo, destroying Yugoslavia (which had begun to self-destruct anyway). In trying to dominate multiethnic, multi-religious Yugoslavia, the Serbs lost the non-Serbian parts of their country (including Kosovo in which they had sacred spaces) and were contained in the part where they did have a historic majority.
No military victory, even one as definitive as that of May 2009, can be durable if the tectonic plates of society start moving apart from each other, and move apart they will, if they are pushed away or excessive pressure is brought to bear upon any of them. Sri Lanka will not be the Israel of South Asia. The drive for Sinhala Buddhist domination over all its minorities will make it the Serbia of South Asia. If this multiethnic, multi-religious, multilingual country is forcefully and unilaterally redefined as Sinhala-Buddhist and nothing else, it will be an ironically self-fulfilling prophecy: the country will shrink, or be shrunk by the world, to its Sinhala Buddhist core/heartland and nothing beyond. The country will crack up and be diminished.

Soon a garland will be plaited with flowers of various fragrances – Lal Kanthe

WEDNESDAY, 20 FEBRUARY 2013
logoVery soon a single garland will be plaited with flowers of various fragrances, not only trade union movement but all masses have the responsibility of building a people’s movement to win rights and a beginning should be made to struggle for a genuine new social order without restricting the trade union movement to fight for mere salary struggles says the President of National Trade Union Center (NTUC) K.D. Lal Kanthe.
Mr. Lal Kanthe Addressing the 15th Convention of All Ceylon Transport Workers’ Union held at Shalika Hall at Narahenpita yesterday (19th) said, “A large number or crises have cropped in the society at present. There are definite reasons for them and we should find definite answers for them. Many in Sri Lanka think that SLTB is an institution that provides a service. The government thinks of making it a profit making institution.  Employees struggle to protect independent transport service. However, there is no independent transport service in Sri Lanka. SLTB has been extremely politicized. Governments use it as one of their assets. In such an environment it is very difficult to maintain a trade union.  In such a situation maintaining the All Ceylon Transport Workers’ Union is important.
There is no free transport service, free education or a free health service in Sri Lanka now.  The government pays the teachers only. All other matters regarding education have to be borne by parents. Where is free health service if people have to seek channel service to get medicine and medical tests have to be got done privately? As such, protecting free transport, free education and free health services is a wrong slogan. It should be changed to ‘Let’s win free transport service, free education and free medical service.’
It is not only Mahinda Rajapaksa that is responsible for this situation. The citizens of this country too are responsible. The cabinet was expanded. The cost of maintaining them increased. However, masses are not concerned. Money is collected from school children. Parents don’t take any action regarding that. We can’t blame the parents either. For, circulars were issued to principals to collect money from students. Minister Bandula  Gunawardene is responsible for it. Wimal Weerawansa scolds P.B. Jayasundara calling him an ‘economic hit man’. Mahinda Rajapaksa scolds officials at the development meetings. They always blame those below them. The masses should find the reason for such acts.
A concept that existed before 1977 was that the government managed everything in the country. Goods and services were produced by state institutions. Everything was done with the initiation of the government. CTB enjoyed a golden age before 1977. It was so with education. Factories belonged to the state. The estates, agriculture, the ownership of seeds were with the state. It was a state mediated economy.
However, after J.R. Jayawardene came to power in 1977 measures were taken to move the economy away from the control of the state. The government withdrew from transport, health and education sectors. The government became an institute that maintained courts and police that is necessary for capitalism to exist. The government distanced from production. An economy that depended on fines, loans and taxes was established. The 78 Constitution was amended to maintain this. The July ’80 strike was against this. State employees were sacked. A white paper was brought to privatize education.  Now Mahinda Rajapaksa is prepared to drive in the last nail to privatize education.  After 35 years we have come to the same road JR constructed. During these 35 years everything was done to take away everything, including the SLTB and other services, from state ownership. Everything was made into commodities. Every relationship became money-oriented. Marx in 1848 said, “All fixed, fast frozen relations, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned..” Now, the religion too has lost its reverence. Students are picking coconuts to raise Rs.800 as a result of the journey that began in ‘78.  As such, there is nothing ‘free’ that has been left in this system. During JR’s time there was a saying that money should also be earned by killing dogs. Now, during Mahinda Rajapaksa’s period money is earned by selling children.
Any intelligent community would not tolerate a leader who doesn’t obey the law. However, the people in Sri Lanka tolerate a president who doesn’t care a tuppence for the law. We have become a savage nation in the world. We have a constitution that doesn’t allow the President to be punished whatever crime he commits.  We have become a nation that tolerates all these.


As a result of the 30 year war an enmity has developed between the Sinhalese and the Tamils. Separatism has not been eradicated. There is international pressure to hold a referendum to merge the North and the East. In such an environment there is an attempt to create an enmity between the Sinhalese and the Muslims.  ‘Black July’ of 1983 developed disunity between the Sinhalese and the Tamils. There is an attempt to create such disunity between the Sinhalese and Muslims and use it for a conspiracy of devolution of power for the North and the East. A group in robes and wearing various kinds of attire, knowingly or unknowingly caught in this conspiracy, is attempting to create a religious turmoil. At a time a stand that should unite all Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims is necessary, they are attempting to develop anger between them. There are three main languages and four religions in our country. People should not be divided basing on these differences.  The government’s favour is towards developing this anger. We didn’t achieve any victory by driving away Tamils from our villages. Similarly, we wouldn’t win anything by chasing away Muslims from our villages. The government should be allowed to solve religious and ‘Halal’ issues. Those who agitate should go to President’s House. After learning a good lesson by developing a conflict with the Tamil society, the need to create a conflict with the Muslim society is incomprehensive. Such maneuvers could be used to get people to forget issues of workers, independence of the judiciary, media freedom etc.
There are issues regarding education, judiciary and media freedom. How could there be a media freedom under a despotic family rule? Is there such a country in this world? There is no opportunity to write anything else but appreciations regarding Rajapaksa family. Criticism is not allowed. The media has the freedom to talk about anything other than Rajapaksa family.  The people should know that media freedom cannot exist with a dictatorship. Next, people should think of taking the leadership to topple this dictatorship. It is the only answer to achieve independence of the judiciary and free education.  There is no progress with Mahinda Rajapaksa or Ranil Wickremesinghe. There is no use in blaming those who maintain this social system. It’s their responsibility to maintain this system. We should think of changing this system and building a new social order. As such, there is no use for so-called strong opposition parties. Masses won’t be benefited even if these oppositions topple the existing government and form their own government as there won’t be any progress.  There is an opposition in the Parliament which is not strong. This opposition in the Parliament cannot do anything. There is no struggle within the Parliament to change the existing social system. For, it is a Parliament where ministers and MPs have become commodities.
The struggle to change the social system exists outside the Parliament. Also, isolated struggles carried out separately cannot achieve victories. The ‘common oppositions’ that enjoy Mahinda’s cup of coffee or that serve separatism and concur with imperialism will not serve any purpose.
A programme should be created to build a broad mass movement that would oppose imperialism, despotic family rule and to win rights. It could be achieved only by struggling to bring all people’s forces including the trade union movement to one strong force. We should present our proposals and dedicate ourselves regarding this. Without limiting ourselves for mere salary struggles a beginning should be made to struggle for a new social order. We are striving to plait a single garland with flowers of various fragrances. We have the responsibility of building a common people’s movement to win rights not only for the trade union movement but for everyone in this country.”

The mother’s Appeal For Saving The Life Of Sudeshkar Facing The Death Sentence In Qatar


By AHRC -February 20, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphMangala Samy Pungonda, the mother of Wengadasalam Sudeshkar yesterday, February 19, appealed for the final sum of Rs. 600,000/= (approximately US$ 5,000) for the saving of her son’s life from execution in Doha, Qatar. She thanked those who have already contributed to the raising of the sum of Rs. 3.5 Million and said that about Rs 1 Million was raised by selling the only small property that belonged to the family and a number of relatives have also contributed by pawning their personal jewelry.
Mangala Samy Pungonda
A member of parliament, Ranjan Ramanayke, contributed Rs. 100,000/= and the EAP Group and Nawaloke Enterprises also contributed Rs. 100,000/= each. The Asian Human Rights Commission based in Hong Kong has by two transfers contributed Rs. 600,000/=. She asked the help of political and religious leaders and everyone to intervene so that her son will not face a similar fate as that of Rizana Nafeek.
Related posts;
An Appeal To Rajapaksa To Intervene So As To Prevent Another Beheading In Qatar


Indonesians save their woman from Saudi death sentence

logoMONDAY, 18 FEBRUARY 2013 
The Indonesian government has been able to save an Indonesian woman who had been sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia for murdering a four months old child by poisoning.
Nurqoyah Bint Marsan Dasan Nuriya, 41 year old Indonesian maid faced the death penalty over charges of murdering four-month old Mishari Al-Bushal, who died in June 2010. Saudi media claimed that Nuriya had confessed to killing the infant and the family of Mishari Al-Bushal insisted that Nuriya should be sentenced to death.
However, the court in Damman ruled that three medical reports did not prove the baby was poisoned and his death may have been due to a genetic condition.
Indonesian government created a special task force to protect migrant workers and employed special attorneys versed in sharia law to fight for the rights of the Indonesian migrant worker facing the death penalty. Nuriya's trial was attended by representatives from the Indonesian Embassy and the Human Rights Commission.
‘Digital Journal’ the web site that reported the incident had stated that authorities in Sri Lanka did not do enough to try to save Rizana Nafeek.
Meanwhile, Indian businessman S.V. Singh Oberoi has been able to save 17 Indian nationals who had been accused of murdering a Pakistani. He has paid $1 million to secure their release.
The UPFA government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs including its minister evading the opportunity to save the innocent girl Rizana Nafeek when there was such an opportunity available is deplorable.

Usually Unpopular Upul Jayasuriya Wins Big At BASL Election Over Rajapaksa-Backed Tirantha

By Colombo Telegraph -February 20, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphIn a huge slap in the face of the Rajapaksa regime, the legal profession voted overwhelmingly for Upul Jayasuriya, Attorney at Law who stood against the Rajapakse regime’s high handed impeachment of Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake, Chief Justice handing him a huge majority of over 1700 votes at the BASL election held today (20.02.2013) at Bars all over Sri Lanka. His real opponent was Tirantha Walaliyadda , who spoke of ‘working with the government’ during his election campaign and controversially attended the ceremony organized by the government which was boycotted by the Bar Association and senior lawyers of standing. Walaliyadda was viewed widely as ‘the government candidate’ for the top slot of the BASL.
Jayasuriya speaking at lawyers protest 
Many senior and junior lawyers contacted by The Colombo Telegraph said that Jayasuriya’s massive victory was a clear indication of firm opposition of the legal profession to the erosion of judicial independence by the Rajapaka regime, since Jayasuriya who was earlier linked to the opposition United National Party was described as a “personally unappealing, generally unpopular figure” who would have been most unlikely to stack up this many votes unless the fact that he stood against repression of judicial independence and destruction of the rule of law was viewed as being of the highest importance by a vast majority of the legal profession.
Jayasuriya maintained throughout his campaign that the so called impeachment of Dr. Shirani Bandaranayakeand ouster from the office of Chief Justice was done improperly and in a way that destroyed judicial independence and caused unprecedented damage to the rule of law.
A senior President’s Counsel told The Colombo Telegraph that it remains to be seen whether Jayasuriya will remain true to his promised commitment to an independent Bar that will fight for judicial independence and the rule of law or fall prey to the many attractions or methods the regime has been known to use in the past to quieten or keep down opposition to its agendas.
There was also a third candidate at this year’s election, R. Thangaraja who is a habitual candidate at all BASL elections, without being a real contender for the post. The election was called after the incumbent presidentWijeyadasa Rajapakshe, PC who is also a member of parliament from the opposition United National Party decided suddenly to step down after his first year in office, without continuing for a second year, as has been the general tradition. His decision came, shortly after his house was shot at. The culprits have not yet been apprehended, though President Mahinda Rajapaksa visited his house, expressed concern and ordered an investigation.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013


133 Catholic Priests Call For A Strong And Action Oriented Resolution On Sri Lanka At The UNHRC


Colombo TelegraphBy Colombo Telegraph -February 19, 2013
One hundred and thirty three Christian priests from Sri Lanka have written to the UN Human Rights Council urging much tougher action on war crimes and human rights. The priests call for a strong and action oriented resolution on Sri Lanka at the 22nd session of the UN Human Rights Council.
We publish below the statement in full;
As a group of concerned Christian clergy living and serving in North and East of Sri Lanka, we are writing to appeal for a strong and action oriented resolution in relation to accountability, reconciliation and human rights in Sri Lanka, which will go beyond the resolution adopted at the 19th session of the Council.
As noted by the High Commissioner for Human Rights in her report to the Council, what we have seen since the rather weak resolution adopted at the 19thsession of the Council is a total lack of political will on the part of the government to implement recommendations therein, such as the call for investigations into allegations of international law during the final stages of the conflict and cooperation with the UN Special Procedures, as evident by the lack of response to requests for country visits by 8 thematic UN Special Procedures for a number of years.
We had also witnessed continuing ignorance and violations of the key LLRC recommendations, related to political solution to the ethnic conflict, release of political prisoners, appointment of a Commissioner to look into disappearances, reparations, release of land occupied illegally by the military, restrictions on media, commemorating those dead and disappeared, use of both national languages etc. In the last year, those criticising and challenging the government in peaceful ways including by engagement with the UN, have been assaulted, questioned, arrested, threatened, discredited and intimidated by government ministers, officials, military and police. Victims include some of us and fellow clergy who are not signing this letter due to fear of reprisals.
We feel that the killing and disappearance of tens of thousands of Tamil people and actions that are supressing the Tamil people and community, our culture, religions, language, land in a systematic way before, during and after the war, appears to be done with an intent to destroy us in whole or part, and thus, it is imperative that the international community addresses this seriously even at this late stage. We fear that at the pace these oppressive methods are carried out after the war, our identity as a people will be destroyed in the near future. Hence there is an exigency to arrive at a political solution which acknowledges the internal self-determination of the Tamil People.
While we have focussed on issues confronting the Tamil people, particularly in the North and East, we also remain deeply concerned about increasing authoritarianism all over Sri Lanka, such as the recent attacks against Muslims, killing of 27 Sinhalese prisoners in November last year, lack of investigation into discovery of skeletal remains in Matale of those suspected to have been tortured and killed, threats, attacks and intimidations of journalists, human rights defenders, student leaders, trade unionists and religious clergy who criticize the government. We remain in solidarity with victims, their families and those who struggle for justice. The most recent impeachment of the Chief Justice bypassing Court decisions and due process, attacks and threats on judges and lawyers, as well as inaction of statutory bodies such as the Police, National Human Rights Commission and Attorney General’s Department reinforces our long held view that justice for Tamils through domestic processes is not realistic, despite our own engagement with several such bodies in good faith.
We are attaching a letter written by the Catholic Bishop of Mannar to the President in August 2012 and a letter to the Catholic Bishops Conference by the Justice and Peace Commission of Jaffna Diocese in January 2013, giving details of our concerns and also serve as examples of the numerous unsuccessful domestic efforts we have undertaken.
We are convinced that the root cause of these problems is a lack of political will, than the capacity. Hence, it is our firm conviction that technical assistance from the UN in the form of training, advice, financial and material support will not suffice, and may even serve as red herring if not accompanied by more substantive investigative, monitoring and reporting role.
Thus, we appeal for a strong and action oriented resolution, which will:
  • 1. Note the lack of progress on human rights and reconciliation since the last year’s resolution, the continuing repression of minorities and those with dissenting views and unwillingness of the Sri Lankan government to address allegations of past violations
  • 2. Establish an international and independent commission of inquiry to look into allegations of violations of international law by all sides during the war, with a proper witness protection mechanism and including with specific reference to findings and recommendations of the UN Secretary General’s Panel of Experts report
  • 3. Appoint a Special Representative / Rapporteur on Sri Lanka with a broad mandate to address the past and on-going violations and assist and advice the government on future reconciliation initiatives
  • 4. Identify a team of thematic UN Special Procedures to visit Sri Lanka considering pending requests for visits
  • 5. Set up an accountability mechanism for UN officials implicated in the failure of the UN’s protection mandate in relation to last stages of war in Sri Lanka as identified in the UN’s own Internal Review
  • 6. Welcome the report of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to the 22ndsession of the Council and request her to report back to the Council’s 25thsession her observations on progress of the above and recommendations.
Thank you.
Sincerely yours,
Signatures
Read the full text of the statement and annexes here.

Coalition of parliamentarians and others

    Logo
  • Sunday, 17 February 2013
  • Parliamentarian Sumanthiran in an interview with Arthur Wamanan of The nation 

Coalition of parliamentarians and others    
Q:  TNA is part of the common opposition coalition with the UNP. On what basis are you part of such a coalition?
This joint opposition was formed sometime ago when the fuel prices went up. The parties came together and started agitations throughout the country. We had our very first protest outside the Fort Railway Station. We have had frequent protests. What happened the other day was only a formalization process. And even in the Memorandum of Understanding that was brought forward that day, it was clearly stated that the parties could have their own political agendas and ideologies. But this coalition was formed for the purpose of protesting against this particular regime identified as the Rajapaksa regime for the various injustices the people have to suffer at the hands of this regime.
Q: The TNA has been part of several coalitions in the past. The opposition too, has been considered quite weak in the current political scenario. Do you think this coalition would help in any way?
That is why it has become necessary for parties in the opposition to come together. Otherwise, the opposition will be very weak and splintered. This way, all the opposition forces can be brought together to be more effective.
Q:  What is the motive behind the opposition platform? Would you contest elections in future?
The MoU itself says that this is not an electoral pact at all. It says that we could contest against each other. But, it does not rule out electoral pacts between parties that are part of the coalition.
Q: How do you intend to go ahead with the movement?
 The same work the organization has been doing will continue. We have been having meetings in various parts of the country. A joint program has been scheduled to be held in Jaffna and Kilinochchi during the latter part of this week. There will be frequent agitations by this organization.
Q: The JVP was not part of the coalition. Why?
The JVP has been invited. But it has chosen not to participate.
Q: Have they declined the offer to join the coalition or are they considering it?
I am not too sure of the dynamics of that.
Q:  What are your thoughts on the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) scheduled to be held in Colombo?
A: Well, Sri Lanka wants to have the cake and also eat it. They want the CHOGM be held here. But they do not mind breaching all the Commonwealth principles and values. That is not a sustainable thing. You must choose one or the other. Sri Lanka should get out of the Commonwealth if it is not happy with it. You cannot criticize the Commonwealth and particularly violate all its principles and values and at the same time want to have such events to show we are part of the Commonwealth. Therefore it is increasingly becoming untenable for the CHOGM to be held in Sri Lanka.  
Q: Sri Lanka was put in a spot of bother at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva last year where a US backed resolution was passed against it. India too supported the motion. What do think would happen this time around?
Sri Lanka has been giving various assurances to the UNHRC. The most important assurance Sri Lanka has given is that there will be an accountability mechanism. That is contained in the joint statement that President Mahinda Rajapaksa made with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon on May 26, 2009. In that, he also gave an undertaking that the long worn out national issue will also be resolved. And there have been various other similar assurances given to the international community. The US-backed resolution was passed last year in this backdrop, urging Sri Lanka to address the question of accountability in a credible way, and also implement the constructive recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), which was the government’s own creation.
This year, the concern of all these countries is greater. There were many countries that were neutral last time and those countries in their comments specifically stated that they were remaining neutral not because they did not want accountability addressed, or they did not want the implementation of the LLRC recommendations. They wanted both very particularly. They wanted to give a chance to the Sri Lankan government.
The government was given a chance and has demonstrated to the world that they are not interested in the least in doing either of those recommendations. So, even the countries that were neutral last time will be compelled to vote for the resolution this time. India voted for the resolution last time, and there is no reason why they should change their stance this time around.  
Q:  The government has said it would provide a detailed report on the progresses made on the said aspects of the resolution. Are you aware of such a report or of its content?
There cannot be any information there. It will be fiction. Any good writer can write up something, because there is no detail to give. There has been no progress whatsoever. So they will have to hire a fiction writer for this purpose. It might sound interesting, but will be a hoax.
Q: The TNA-army friction seems to be continuing, especially after the attack on a newspaper distributor in Jaffna. The military also said it would take action against TNA for accusing the army for the attack. What do you have to say?
The military cannot take high ground and threaten legal action against the TNA, when on July 16, 2011 the army stormed into a TNA meeting and assaulted the people and chased the crowd away. They were fully armed and were carrying long batons and in full uniform. We made a police complaint immediately after that, and no action has been taken to date. We were given assurance by the Jaffna Military Commander that all soldiers who took part in the assault will be court marshaled. Nothing of that sort has happened. Without being able to produce the persons responsible for that, the Jaffna Security Forces Commander has no moral authority to take objection to our accusations against the military.  
Q:  What is your take on the arrest and release of the Jaffna University students?
We do welcome the gesture by the President to release the students. But, here is a situation where there is no process, not even finding whether guilty, and there isn’t even a production before a judicial officer. The way this happened has raised many an eyebrow. If he is able to release them with one word of command that only means that they were held at his pleasure. There are 39 others who were arrested at the same time who continue to undergo rehabilitation without having been produced before the court.


Warning – Disturbing Images: The Last Hours Of The Son Of Prabhakaran

Colombo Telegraph
February 19, 2013
New photographs have emerged which raise fresh questions about the conduct of Sri Lanka’s armed forces during the final stages of the operation against Tamil rebels and have led to claims the 12-year-old son of the militants’ leader may have been summarily executed.
A series of photographs taken a few hours apart and on the same camera, show Balachandran Prabhakaran, son of Villupillai Prabhakaran, head of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). One of them shows the boy sitting in a bunker, alive and unharmed, apparently in the custody of Sri Lankan troops. Another, a few hours later, shows the boy’s body lying on the ground, his chest pierced by bullets.
The images were taken in May 2009 at the very end of the Sri Lankan government’s operation to crush the LTTE, which had launched a bloody, decades-long insurgency against the state that led to the deaths of perhaps 70,000 people. The authorities always said Prabhakaran’s son was killed in cross-fire, as troops moved in to take the LTTE’s last stronghold, located on a scrap of coastline near Mullaitivu in the north-east of the country.
But the images, contained in a new documentary, No Fire Zone, which will be screened at the Geneva Human Rights Film Festival during the UN Human Rights Council meeting in March, suggest the boy was captured alive and killed at a later stage.
A forensic pathologist who examined the later images for the film-makers, said the boy was shot five times in the chest. Furthermore, propellant burns around the wound suggest he was shot at very close range.
“The new photographs are enormously important evidentially because they appear to rule out any suggestion that Balachandran was killed in cross-fire or during a battle. They show he was held, and even given a snack, before being taken and executed in cold blood,” claimed the film’s director, Callum Macrae.
“It is difficult to imagine the psychology of an army in which the calculated execution of a child can be allowed with apparent impunity. That these events were also photographed and kept as war trophies by the perpetrators is even more disturbing.” The 12-year-old’s father, Prabhakaran, was killed along with most of the senior leadership of the LTTE as Sri Lanka’s army advanced on the rebels’ position. There were reports at the time that several LTTE officials were shot and killed as they tried to surrender.
Prabhakaran’s body was displayed on state television, part of the front of his skull missing, also suggesting he may have been shot at close range. The Sri Lankan authorities have always denied shooting anyone who was trying to surrender. Last night, Brigadier PR Wanigasooriya, an army spokesman, said Sri Lanka had been a repeated victim of “lies, half truths, rumours, and numerous forms of speculations”.
“No substantive evidence have been presented for us to launch an investigation,” he added, referring to alleged human rights abuses.
Sri Lanka has always insisted it did what it could to ensure no civilians were killed during its operation against the LTTE. Yet a team appointed by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon found that up to 40,000 civilians may have been killed. The team said there were credible allegations both sides committed war crimes.
The photographs will place additional pressure on David Cameron to announce whether or not he will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM), e in Sri Lanka in November. A Downing Street official with Mr Cameron on his visit to India said on Monday that no decision had yet been taken.
NGOs and organisations, among them the cross-party Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, have called on him to boycott the meeting.
Courtesy the Independent UK
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