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


Contradictions And Disconnects; Will “VipakshayĆ© Virodaya” Threaten Rajapaksa ?


Colombo TelegraphBy Kusal Perera -February 20, 2013 
“Our aim is to change the regime. So we invite everyone to join hands with us.” - Ranil Wickremesinghe – UNP leader, at the launch of the new “Opposition Agitation” (Vipakshaye Virodaya) Monday 11 February, 2013
Another seemingly new “alliance” launched on February 11 Monday, has some “throw away” politicians also on board and make the same stale statements as before. For how long would the people keep listening to such statements, that in effect are only statements ? Will the people take seriously, any statement to the effect that the Rajapaksa regime would be overthrown soon ? This in fact is not the first time Wickramasinghe had said, he would topple the Rajapaksa regime. A few days before in Matara, Wickramasinghe said, after he pledged to topple the Rajapaksa regime by 2014, the regime has got scared. Few years ago, he called on all democratic forces to join the “Platform for Freedom” that announced a “Five Precept” programme of action titled “Commitment for Change”. He promised to topple the Rajapaksa regime and rebuild the country, on that platform too. Launched in November, 2009, at the Jayawardne Centre, “Platform for Freedom” then did not include the TNA, officially.
During a slow and a lazy hike through 03 years and many elections including the 2010 presidential and parliamentary elections that needs no new comment, the Platform for Freedom had new add-ons like the single headed New JHU and the TNA at its public meetings. But, it went into total slumber during the “Impeachment” against Chief Justice Bandaranayake. As one at Hulftsdorp said, even police dogs wouldn’t have traced where those leaders were, during the “impeachment”. This  “Opposition Agitation” launched anew, comes in the wake of “Platform for Freedom” giving up on it’s rusty credibility to speak about democratic issues. The new “Opposition Agitation” includes more names, a longer list of political affiliations, but apparently nothing new.
What nevertheless made some to take another look at this “Opposition Agitation” was its first campaign in Thelippalai, on behalf of Tamil people. It looked a new approach with the TNA firmly in and away from Sinhala chauvinism that often tails campaigns led by the UNP. But that was 305 kms away in Jaffna. Here in Colombo, despite Wickramasinghe’s reported speech in Thelippalai against  high security zones robbing the right of the Tamil people there to have their own land, his own Sinhala trade union leaders in the Jathika Sevaka Sangamaya (JSS) were proposing to organise support bases in their branch unions, for the newly emergent, extremely violent and racist “Bodu Bala Sena” (BBS). Local UNP supporters were seen canvassing support for BBS slogans to boycott Muslim shops and “Halal” certified products. There is definitely a total disconnect between Wickramasinghe and his own party loyalists. A gap that had never been attempted at, in politically bridging.
He has not been able to mobilise affiliate organisations of the party, in taking up serious issues against the present regime. The JSS is far outside any trade union activism. It had never been allowed to develop a workplace leadership, even to match the Sri Lanka Nidahas Sevaka Sangamaya, of the SLFP. Therefore it had never taken any initiative to even mobilise its own membership on any issue. Not even on galloping cost of living or on wage increases. They thus remain, more as party sympathisers. During Cyril Mathew‘s time, he got it mobilised as a Sinhala thug outfit and the JSS remains so, though without venom.
The UNP’s women wing, the “Lak Vanitha” remains an organisation whose leadership prefers to donate mats, while women and children from North to South get abused, raped and murdered, one leading English Sunday news paper said was 05 rapes a day. This women’s leadership in the UNP is alien to the large presence of toiling young women in the Apparel Sector and slaving Rizana Nafeeks in the ME, who play a very vital role for this deficit driven Rajapaksa economy. There is a mismatch, both in terms of personalities who can not afford to challenge the Rajapaksa regime with their spouses enjoying positions and privileges awarded by the ruling regime and in terms of political naivety in them.
With such heavy baggages not taken to account, this new collective of parties and groups in this new alliance that has no clear political programme, but only slogans they feel, could be popular attractions, has no additional constituencies, apart from the UNP and the TNA. Politically therefore this is not much different to the previous alliances and the programmes that were adopted. The “Five Precepts” titled “Commitment for Change” put forward when the Platform for Freedom was launched 03 years and 03 months ago, contains almost the same formula, though in a different format. It thus says, there is a fundamental flaw in how opposition politics understand alliances for “unity” and how they are defined. That flaw is what keeps this Rajapaksa regime afloat, though in turbid waters.
“Unity” in a broad, party “front” is calculated in numbers of leaders sans quality that would sit on the stage and the numbers that would address the meeting. But increased numbers on stage without political quality, does not necessarily bring increased numbers to the venue of the meeting. Nor does that increased number of leaders on stage, increase the political interest and motivation of the “anti Rajapaksa” crowd. The interest of marginalised and disgruntled polity, in rallying round the alliance. More because, some who are brought to the “Opposition Agitation” stage to increase numbers are discredited “political tourists” recently arrived to be on opposition platforms. The question is, how could a serious change come about, with a new political alliance.
A change would want a thoroughly thrashed out programme, the whole society could easily see and feel as an alternative to what this Rajapaksa regime holds out for them. Equally important is the motivation and conviction the larger constituencies in the alliance have in carrying through that programme. Today what matters is the Southern constituency the UNP could reach out to. What matters is the possibility of reaching out to that Sinhala constituency, as different to the Rajapaksas in every aspect of governance. On that, this new “Opposition Agitation” should be seen in the South as “anti Rajapaksa” in both form and content, with a promise for the future. Politically as anti racist, pro democratic and development oriented in content. When Wickramasinghe speaks for the Tamil people in Thelippalai, that political inclusiveness, that plurality, has to be seen and understood in that very same tone and colour, in Maharagama too. Its that consistency in inclusiveness, in plurality which defines a political alternative to Rajapaksa, as socially valid. But that with the UNP, is not the case. Wickramasinghe can not make that happen. That is where the UNP led  alliances have always failed.
Its partly the very chauvinistic birth of the UNP and its Sinhala history that buckles a pluralistic, inclusive presence. A Sinhala chauvinist party from birth, into power, it started off in 1948 by disfranchising Indian origin Tamils and leaving them “Stateless”. It started changing the demographic pattern in the East through colonising. It marched against the Tamil people in 1957. It instigated violence against Tamils in 1979 and in 1981 May-June, destroyed Jaffna town and burnt the Jaffna library. In 1983 July, it organised the most ruthless racial violence in our history, destroying Tamil business and devastating Tamil life. From D.S. to Jayawardne through Premadasa to Wijetunge, UNP has acted as very racial, Sinhala nationalist regimes for the benefit of Sinhala businessmen. Its a political heritage the UNP still lives with and is carried by men like Sajith, Karu Jayasuriya and most others in Wickramasinghe’s good books too, who’d not challenge the Sinhala politics of this Rajapaksa regime. Its easy for them to live with traditional Sinhala politics of the party, visiting Buddhist temples, and talking of individual corruption instead.
The party as a whole thus remains a total contradiction to what Wickramasinghe articulates in his liberal language and he has proved he keeps away from overcoming that contradiction. This racist contradiction was so even in the SLFP, when Chandrika Kumaratunge was brought in as the leader. Her inclusive politics was only an attraction for the remnant “Left” and perhaps for the moderates in Tamil society. She was not accepted by the SLFP for her politics. The SLFP carried her over as a “face change” that could defeat the UNP after 17 years of continuous rule. She was brought in with a guarantee, that she would only help glue the North – East market to the South and not hand it over to “Left” politics. Thus her promise to “humanise” the open economy.
Though with Chandrika as its head, in political content and life, the SLFP remained the party that made Sinhala language the only official language in this country in 1956. The party that for the first time used the military in the North in 1962 to crush Federal Party (FP) protest campaigns. Marched against Tamil people in 1968 and left the young novice Buddhist monk Dambarawe Rathanasara a victim of the protest. It remained the party that brought in geographical and language “standardisation” for university entrance and created the Republican Constitution in 1972, in further marginalising the minorities. Why Chandrika as President in August 2000 could not push her new Constitution with a substantial package on devolution, was not only because the UNP opposed it. But more because her own Ministers and MPs were openly agitated and PM Rathnasiri decided to stall it, with Mahinda backing him and MP Dixon Perera crossing over to the UNP.
Both the SLFP and the UNP as Sinhala political parties in the South competing between each other for political power, were only pushed to consider minority rights as an economic necessity. As a necessity for a larger market and social stability. The contradiction and disconnect in politics between the liberal leader and the Sinhala party and its affiliate organisations, stem from this endemic political chauvinism. This historical contradiction and disconnect has to be addressed, if Wickramasinghe wants to prove his statement right. Wickramasinghe needs to have with his latest “Opposition Agitation”, the new consumerist urban working class that came into being after the economy was opened in 1978. He needs to have the working class that by now has extremely large swathes of women labour, if he is to prove his statement right. The UNP as a party has to lead a political change in the new “Opposition Agitation”, gearing its JSS as a trade union and its Lak Vanitha as a women’s front, to break this “disconnect”. The party would have to be dragged out politically to oppose and challenge a Sinhala regime, instead of meekly following Sinhala racist campaigns that prop the Rajapaksa regime. Dragged out to challenge the regime on severe breach of law enforcement and rampant crime.
What is amiss, is the capacity and capability of the UNP leadership in taking that political turn. The second level leadership that Jayawardne groomed to back his politics in the party is wholly absent for Wickramasinghe, as a political backup. His insecure reluctance to groom a second level leadership in the party is now telling on its politics. New faces accepted from political hikers on a stage will not be a substitute that makes the “Opposition Agitation” work as an anti Rajapaksa campaign. All who were there and all who were brought in, would only add extra weight in carrying a larger entourage around the country, to speak to the Southern Sinhala  constituency of the UNP that still opt to remain with the legacies of Premadasa and Cyril Mathew. Would still feel closer to and comfortable with the Sinhala racist campaigns of BBS, in the absence of a political change in the whole party, top to bottom. The presence of the TNA may have some influence in keeping the “lost comrades” of the “Left” on the platform, but that is also no answer for the UNP constituency to change. “Commitment for Change” that was promised to the people 03 years and 03 months ago on the now defunct Platform for Freedom, should first come from within the UNP, for Wickramasinghe to give some substance to his oft repeated statement, that he is out to topple the Rajapaska regime in 2014. He still has time, if he accepts the parliament is not where politics play decisively, is serious and politically capable both in his own party and outside with the alliance to engage politically against Sinhala racism, calling for a change for plurality and democracy.
Tamil van reached to Germany
[ Wednesday, 20 February 2013, 04:22.29 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Tamil Van mobile exhibition demanding to grant justice for Lankan Tamils brief about the genocide attacks and hold important meeting in Belgium for past two day began its journey to Germany today.
Tamil activists were gathered in the German border to welcome Gopi Sivanthan.
Tamil Van will continue journey for seven days in Germany, sources said.


Sri Lanka rejects charges of executing Prabhakaran's son

Headlines Today | February 19, 2013
Sri Lankan High Commissioner to India, Prasad Kariyawasam, claims the pictures were morphed and were being circulated ahead of the International meet to embarrass the island nation.




Sri Lanka’s Unfinished War

By Stanly Johny -February 20, 2013 
Stanly Johny
Colombo TelegraphKaru was a grocery shopkeeper in Puthukkudiyiruppu when Sri Lanka’s 26-year-long civil war was nearing its end. Like tens of thousands of Tamil civilians in the island nation’s north and northeast, Karu and his pregnant wife, Gowri, were caught up in the war in 2009. He was attacked and dumped in a hospital, where he was brutally tortured; his wife gave birth to a baby girl in a bunker in the heyday of the war. They finally managed to leave Sri Lanka for Tamil Nadu and then set out on a deadly 27-day-long boat journey to Australia.
When Frances Harrison met them in the Villawood Immigration Detention Centre in Australia, their daughter Puni was two years old. “Puni has known more suffering in two years than most people experience in a lifetime. She’s been bombed, starved, imprisoned and threatened with death… She smelled death and heard explosions before she even had the words to describe them,” writes Ms Harrison in Still Counting the Dead: Survivors of Sri Lanka’s Hidden War.
Karu represents thousands of Tamils who lived through the conflict’s final bloody months. Ms Harrison, who was in Sri Lanka between 2000 and 2004 as a BBC correspondent, recounts in her book the suffering of Tamils during the last days of the war through stories of individuals such as Karu. It is a tale that is both gripping and deeply disturbing.
The government of Mahinda Rajapaksa launched a deadly offensive campaign against the Tamil rebels in 2008, determined to end the long-drawn civil war. When the army advanced into the Tamil territories and tens of thousands of civilians were trapped in the battlefield in northeastern Lanka, the world’s leaders looked the other way. “By 2009, much of the international community had made a conscious decision to side with the Sri Lankan government and ignore the cries for intervention,” the author writes. Since foreign media were totally banned from the conflict zone, details about the army’s war tactics and civilian casualties were not immediately available.
However, Sri Lanka’s claims about the war began facing serious questions by 2010 after independent reports accused the Rajapaksa government of war crimes. Veteran journalist Jon Lee Anderson’s New Yorker report, “Death of the Tiger”, in early January 2011 and the two-part documentary of British television network Channel 4, “Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields”, demolished the government’s claims about the war. Ms Harrison’s Still Counting the Dead adds a new layer of detail to the conflict.
The army, she writes, employed “scorched-earth tactics, blurring the distinction between civilians and combatants, and enforcing a media blackout”. During the conflict the government declared official “no-fire zones”, where it brought thousands of Tamil civilians, who were later bombed by the military. The third and last of the official no-fire zones in the northeast turned out to be “a tropical beach transformed into a place of random slaughter,” Ms Harrison says. Not even hospitals were spared. One doctor she spoke to admitted: “They wanted to kill as many as possible”. The photographs of the assassination of LTTE leader Prabhakaran’s 12-year-old son published in Tuesday’s edition of The Hindu attest to this extreme brutality.
Ms Harrison doesn’t have any sympathy for the Tigers. She believes both the government and the rebels were responsible for the humanitarian catastrophe in Sri Lanka. When the army attacked the Tamil civilians indiscriminately, the rebels used them as human shields. “Obviously it’s not only one side — the Tamil Tigers also have a responsibility for what happened. And that needs to be recognised so that those people can move forward.” She describes the story of a Tamil couple who hid their 17-year-old girl in an oil drum buried in their garden to stop her being taken as a child soldier by the Tigers. But the rebels finally found the girl and took her. “Three months later, the girl was returned home, her dead body wrapped in a red Tiger flag.”
According to the United Nations (UN), as many as 40,000 people were killed in the first five months of 2009. Ms Harrison says the number will be higher since the UN estimates were “conservative”. But the international community largely remained passive to the suffering of the Tamils. In June 2010, under pressure from human rights groups, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon set up a panel to look into the allegations of war crimes. The panel concluded in 2011 that “war crimes and crimes against humanity were committed” in Sri Lanka. But the UN chief did nothing about the report. When the UN Human Rights Council finally passed a resolution in 2012 on Sri Lanka, it had no reference to war crimes. This happens if the crimes are committed in the name of fighting terrorism, says Ms Harrison.
The Sri Lankan government doesn’t want to dig up the past. It says everyone should now concentrate on the future. But in Sri Lanka, the past is still alive. As an aid worker is quoted in the book as saying: “The war is not over in Sri Lanka; you don’t solve these kinds of problems on the battlefield.”


Killing of LTTE chief's son is a war crime, says Jayalalithaa

Killing of LTTE chief's son is a war crime, says Jayalalithaa
 February 20, 2013 13
Latest NewsChennaiTamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa on Wednesday described as "a war crime" the alleged cold-blooded killing of the son of the late Tamil Tigers' chief Velupillai Prabhakaran.

"The killing of Balachandran (Prabhakaran) is a war crime," the Chief Minister told the media in Chennai, and urged India to work with the US to pass a resolution in the UN denouncing rights violations in Sri Lanka.

Ms Jayalalithaa spoke a day after a section the media carried photographs of 12-year-old son Balachandran seated in a Sri Lankan military bunker just before he was killed allegedly at close range.
The pictures are part of a film, "No Fire Zone", which seeks to document the widespread rights' abuses during the final phase of Sri Lanka's war when the military crushed the Tamil Tigers in May 2009.

Sri Lanka has denied that Prabhakaran's son was killed in cold blood, and maintained that he died in crossfire with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

The Chief Minister said the young boy's killing was "unforgivable".

"I call upon the Indian government to hold discussions with the US and other like-minded nations and prepare a resolution to be passed by the UN (against Sri Lanka)," she said.

She added that in line with a resolution passed by the Tamil Nadu assembly, India should impose an economic embargo on Sri Lanka "with the cooperation of other countries".

The embargo should remain in place "until the Tamils who have been displaced there and confined in camps (after the conflict) are allowed to return to their homes and live with equal rights on par with" members of the majority Sinhalese community and "live a life of dignity".

Prabhakaran's son killing an act of extreme cruelty: Jayalalithaa

A file picture of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa at a function in Chennai. Photo: M. Vedhan.

A file picture of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa at a function in Chennai. Photo: M. Vedhan.
B. KOLAPPAN- February 20, 2013
Return to frontpage
Describing the killing of Balachandran, the son of LTTE leader Prabakaran, “as the cold-blooded war crime of gravest nature and unforgivable act” Chief Minister Jayalalithaa on Wednesday called upon India to work together with the United States and like-minded countries to ensure that those responsible were made to face an international trial.
Addressing a press meet here at the Secretariat, the Chief Minister said Balachandran, who was only 12 years old, was just a child. He had not committed any crime. He had been killed "simply because he happened to be the son of Prabakaran,” she said.
The Chief Minister likened the massacre of Tamils in Sri Lanka with the Nazi destruction of Jews in Germany.
She reiterated that an economic embargo be imposed on Sri Lanka till the Tamils were rehabilitated honourably and given rights on par with Sinhalese. A resolution should be passed in the United Nations to this effect and India should take the initiative by collaborating with other countries. She recalled a resolution adopted by the Tamil Nadu Assembly in 2011 on the issue.

NZ Tamils accuse Obama for doing nothing to check genocide

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 20 February 2013, 04:19 GMT]
Addressing the US President Barack Obama on Sunday, the Tamil Action Front (TAF) in New Zealand in a press statement said, “Nothing tangible was done by your administration with regard to the on-going genocide in Sri Lanka in your first term. We hope you will now take meaningful effective measures to save the Tamils from genocide.” The stand taken by the NZ Tamils in directly accusing and addressing the US Administration is a significant development in the diaspora, resulting from a long frustration in the ‘looking upon’ polity hitherto followed, political observers said. The TAF statement, signed by its coordinator Mr A. Theva Rajan, demanded the US Administration to come out with a resolution at Geneva to create a structure with powers that could redeem and preserve the territoriality of Tamils and could save them from the on-going genocide. 

A Thevarajan
Mr. A Thevarajan, New Zealand [Image courtesy: Vanitha Prasad, Western Leader]
Measures superseding the constitution of the genocidal State only could stop the genocide, the TAF statement argued.

The statement drew the attention of Mr Obama to the special report on “Preventing Genocide,” prepared by Madeline Albright and handed over to him when he had assumed office for the first time. 

The Albright report emphasised on the need to nib in the bud any attempt at genocide and said that this would require the President to muster political will that had too often been lacking in the past. 

“We have a duty to find the answer before the vow of ‘never again’ is once again betrayed,” the TAF statement cited the Albright report. 

The TAF statement also reminded the US Administration of its earlier measures during the crisis of East Timor, i.e., the appointment of a tough special diplomat to halt Indonesian military oppression, and demanded action in similar lines to remove the SL military rule in the North and East.



Enough Is More Than Enough


By Kath Noble -February 20, 2013 
Kath Noble
Colombo TelegraphWe don’t seem to have learnt anything from the long list of journalists who have come under attack in Sri Lanka in recent years. Whenever an incident takes place, we do exactly the same things, and on each and every occasion, our response does nothing to prevent a recurrence.
The first step is condemnation. But why? Surely everybody agrees that it is wrong? Could anybody argue that the people who shot Faraz Shauketaly of The Sunday Leader on Friday did the right thing? No, so let’s not waste our time and energy. That such violence is appalling should be treated as so obvious that it simply doesn’t need to be said.
Then comes our dutiful reporting of what the President says about it, no matter how disingenuous his statement.
During the weekend, all newspapers in Sri Lanka were careful to inform the public that Mahinda Rajapaksahad ordered a special investigation into Friday’s shooting. How very nice of him. Has he instructed the IGP to appoint a special team? That’s reassuring. I can’t remember the last time he did that. Oh no, silly me, that’s what he does every time. That’s what he did when Lasantha Wickrematunge of The Sunday Leader was murdered in January 2009, when Poddala Jayantha of Dinamina was beaten up in June 2009, when Keith Noyahr of The Nation was attacked in May 2008, when Lal Mawalage of Rupavahini was knifed in January 2008 and when Prageeth Ekneligoda of Lanka-e-News went missing in January 2010. Every time.
And how many times have these extra special efforts brought results? That’s right, none at all.
Still, even The Sunday Leader decided to use the President’s declaration as the headline of the first piece that it posted on its website.
Let’s undertake here and now not to report any further such comments by any member of the Government until the perpetrator of at least one attack has been convicted and is rotting in jail for the rest of his miserable life. The headline should be ‘Nobody convicted for violence against journalists under Mahinda Rajapaksa’ not ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa orders a probe’. Come on, friends at The Daily Mirror and Ceylon Today, both of which followed the pattern set by The Sunday Leader!
Probes obviously have to happen when somebody is shot. They aren’t news, and they certainly aren’t worthy of mention in a headline.
The next step in our form book on responding to attacks on journalists, which at least some of us always seem to reach, is to raise the possibility that there was some other motive than stifling the freedom of the press.
This time, The Nation on Sunday has surpassed all previous efforts to suck up to Mahinda Rajapaksa, brazenly using the headline ‘Motive for attack shrouded in mystery’, while making sure to refer to Faraz not as a journalist but as a ‘journalist cum businessman’ with a ‘part-time journalistic career’. The funny thing is that his byline has appeared in Sri Lankan newspapers an awful lot more often than those of the ‘full-time journalists’ who produced that copy for The Nation on Sunday!
They went on to suggest that the shooting was actually the result of a land dispute.
However, they have absolutely no evidence of any such thing. Police sources just had to mention it is a possibility, and these ‘full-time journalists’ enthusiastically copied down what they said. The real mystery is why our colleagues at The Nation on Sunday don’t have time to run businesses, if that’s all there is to journalism! In case they hadn’t realised, everything is possible for exactly as long as we avoid looking for facts. There are several billion people who could possibly have shot Faraz. Even aliens will have to prove that they weren’t in Mount Lavinia on Friday before we can definitively rule them out.
That’s the whole point of a probe.
Until somebody is convicted, we can’t say for sure why it happened. So let’s not give credence to any more totally unfounded rumours that are so extraordinarily convenient for the Government.
If the Government really wants us to believe that press freedom isn’t a problem in Sri Lanka, it can very well prove it in a court of law. Why do we try so hard to help them?
Even years later, we are still at it.
The killing of Lasantha Wickrematunge of The Sunday Leader was a watershed moment for Sri Lankan journalists. He was one of the best known editors in the country and a personal friend of both Ranil Wickremasinghe and Mahinda Rajapaksa, and his was an English newspaper that was read by the diplomatic community and indeed throughout the world. But his assassins very easily got away with it.
If further attention was needed to his case, it was surely to expose the individuals who were responsible. But instead we are busy preparing their defence.
A month or so ago, Uvindu Kurukulasuriya published an article claiming that Lasantha Wickrematunge was targeted not because he ran a newspaper that regularly lambasted the Government but because he was an Indian spy! The mind boggles.
Apparently we don’t need proof when we accuse the dead. When the person isn’t around to defend himself, instead of proving that he was an Indian spy, we can just say that he was seen entering the house of an Indian diplomat, as if we didn’t know that it is both normal and necessary for journalists to interact with all kinds of people. That is how facts are uncovered! More extraordinarily still, when he can’t say otherwise, we can argue that he was killed because he told the Indian diplomat a ‘secret’ that was shared with him by Mahinda Rajapaksa, not only once again without proof but also without any idea what that ‘secret’ could be or why Mahinda Rajapaksa was so foolish as to tell it to an Opposition-supporting newspaper editor who could equally well have published it.
Lasantha Wickrematunge isn’t accused of being a Government spy, although he was also seen going to Temple Trees, because it obviously isn’t true.
The same piece slyly mentions that Poddala Jayantha was regarded by the American embassy as a key contact in Sri Lanka, implying once again with absolutely no basis that he too was more a spy than a journalist.
Now in the extremely unlikely event of anybody ever being tried for attacking either one of them, the accused might well claim that they were legitimate targets.
With enemies like these, the Government really doesn’t need friends!
Seriously guys, let’s smarten up.
Journalism is an absolutely miserable profession in Sri Lanka. If a journalist is honest, he earns little or nothing, and if he does his job well, he will at a minimum have to face near constant abuse from those who don’t like what he writes. And when he is a bit too successful and gets attacked, his friends and colleagues will dedicate themselves to discussing his faults, real and imagined, to convince people that he was never exactly a journalist anyway.
Frankly, only total lunatics need apply.
However, Sri Lanka needs journalists, and we need each other. So let’s try to stick together.
Given recent history, we are perfectly justified in assuming that Faraz Shauketaly was shot for his journalism. What’s more, we should make a point of looking back at his work and doing whatever we can to share it as widely as possible. We can hope that he will continue with it once he recovers, but he could no doubt do with some encouragement and support.
To that end, let’s turn to his most recent articles, several of which have focused on Lalith Kotelawala (17thFebruary, 10th February, 27th January, 30th December). Faraz notes that when the Golden Key Credit Card Company collapsed, resulting in average losses of Rs. 2.7 million for more than 9,000 people, Chairman Lalith Kotelawala promised that they would be reimbursed very quickly. Indeed, this was the basis on which he was released from prison in 2009. However, although he somehow continues to live a life of luxury and his wife swans around upmarket areas of London, these unfortunate investors have still received no more than Rs. 200,000 each. The Central Bank under Ajith Nivard Cabraal, which for some reason disbanded an investigation into the company in 2006, claims that it had fulfilled its duty to the public by simply not including the company in the list of accredited financial institutions that it occasionally published.
Faraz has also written about a doctor in a private hospital who is alleged to have encouraged his patients to opt for unnecessary procedures, with the involvement of an unregistered foreign practitioner (February 3rd).
Prior to that came a series of pieces on coal imports, in which Faraz blames Ceylon Shipping Corporation Chairman Kanchana Ratwatte and former Minister of Power and Energy Champika Ranawaka for the loss of $10 million on a shipment that couldn’t be unloaded due to bad weather and was instead handed over without the necessary guarantees to a company that subsequently delivered a replacement that didn’t meet the quality standards of the Ceylon Electricity Board (6th January, 22nd December, 9th December, 24th November, 17th November, 10th November). He threatened to register a complaint with the Bribery Commission if action was not taken.
In addition, there have been articles on former National Savings Bank Chairman Pradeep Kariyawasamregarding the purchase of shares in The Finance Company for which he is already being investigated by the Bribery Commission following his wife’s falling out with the Government, and with regard to another incident during his tenure as Chairman of the Sri Lanka Insurance Corporation in 2010 (1st December, 10th November).
It is these issues that we should be discussing now.
We also have to remind the public of all the violence that journalists have faced in Sri Lanka, and how few consequences there have been. People have short memories, and letting them forget is simply not an option.
*Kath Noble’s column may be accessed online at http://kathnoble.wordpress.com/. She may be contacted atkathnoble99@gmail.com.

Minister Jayasena says called IGP to “seek relief”

TUESDAY, 19 FEBRUARY 2013 
Cabinet Minister Sumedha Jayasena while admitting that she called the IGP and requested the release of three illegal sand miners, who were arrested on December 27, said she intended to make a statement regarding the issue.

“This is all fabrication; the media is slinging mud at us. There were three people who were caught on December 27, and they were helpers working at a building I am constructing but I had no knowledge of this particular incident. These people were arrested and they did not know that it was illegal. They had done this before as well. When they were arrested I didn’t call any other officer because I don’t do things like that. I only called the IGP and asked him to give the people some relief” she said.

The Minister of Parliamentary Affairs when asked if calling the IGP to “seek relief” for those involved in illegal activities was ethical, the Minister admitted it was not.

“I thought it was more prudent to call the IGP and tell him. I admit it was wrong. I have called the DIG twice before and on both occasions the people were punished so I didn’t call him. I asked the IGP to give some relief because those arrested didn’t know what they were doing was illegal or that there was no permit,” the Minister said.

Speaking further the Minister said the IGP had responded saying if the complaint was not written “he would see what he could do”.

 “You can verify with the IGP if you wish. At the time the complaint was not written and as soon as the DIG had gotten to know about this (call to the IGP) he had hurriedly written the complaint and told to produce them in courts.”

The Minister when asked if she was aware about the previous convictions of the suspects for the same offence, she said she wasn’t.

 “How would I know? They were only helpers or the workers and I was not aware of any such thing” she said.

She further said she had requested the IGP to conduct an investigation into the actions of the DIG “much before these incidents”.

“ I have documentary proof to show how the DIG victimized people and I will submit them all. Innocent people were victimized. I’ll give you an example.

There was an incident in the Moneragala town where there was fight between a group and two drunken policemen. The four people who were arrested in connection with the fight were produced with bogus possessions. One person was even produced and said to have had 2 kilos of Ganja. Who will come to a fight with Ganja?” she asked.

When it was pointed out that the incident involved a brother of the Chairman of a Pradeshiya Sabha, who was convicted for assaulting a forest range officer and was serving a suspended sentence the Minister said she was not aware of this fact.

“ I don’t know about the history, but on this instance everything was false. I have never done anything wrong in my life. We had urged the IGP to give the people of the district some relief by taking the DIG out of the area. The OIC and the HQIs were terrified of him and we can’t talk to them. He had instructed everyone not to listen to politicians and to only take orders from him. The OICs will talk now, they were frightened to work under him” the Minister said.

Minister prompts DIG transfer, Police deny political pressure

Top Police sources alleged yesterday that the controversial removal of the Moneragala Police division from DIG M.R.Lathif was prompted by an incident involving the arresting of illegal sand miners connected to Cabinet Minister Sumedha Jayasena of the Moneragala District.

Accordingly the Cabinet Minister had allegedly exerted pressure on Police officers to release, three men who were arrested while sand mining on the banks of Kumbukkan oya on December 27.

The minister had reportedly urged the Police officers at the arresting station, including senior officers overlooking the area to release the offenders stating “They are my men and the sand was to build my house”.

However, the Police had withstood the pressure upon instructions from DIG M.R Lathiff and produced the three men in courts. Consequent to the calls from the Minister and a subsequent background check on the suspects, it was revealed that they had been convicted for the same offence on a previous occasion.

The suspects were reportedly fined Rs. 170,000 each after being produced in court.

Sources said the sand was actually to be transported to a site of a “three to four storey hotel that was being built.”

While pressure was building up on the Police over this incident, in a separate incident on January 30 four men including the brother of a Pradeshiya Sabha Chairman of the area were arrested for allegedly assaulting three Police officers on duty.

Four men under the influence of liquor had created a stir at the Moneragala main bus stop, after which three patrolling policemen had intervened. The four men had allegedly assaulted the Police officers with a sword and fled the area.

Later that night all four men were arrested and brought to the Moneragala Police station.

During investigations it was revealed that one of the suspects, who is the brother of the PS Chairman was under a suspended sentence imposed on him for assaulting and snatching away the duty pistol of a range forest officer previously.

The local government member had then allegedly exerted undue pressure on the Police to release the suspect, to which the Police had not relented. It is reported that DIG Lathif had stood his ground and instructed the local Police to act according to the law which irked the PS member and his colleagues.
Sources in the area said that the former STF veteran upon appointment as DIG had initiated “Community based Policing” with vigour in the area. Police personnel including the OIC of Police stations were instructed and encouraged to participate with affairs of the locals in order to curb an increasing crime rate, and other social vices prevalent in the rural villages.

It is reported that the “complaint box” system, whereby a complaint box is placed in a school system was introduced by the DIG, which led to the detection of many criminal activities in the area together with social vices. This system was later implemented islandwide on instructions of the Police Chief IGP N.K. Ilangakoon.

The DIG had also initiated many projects which were focused on curbing social vices, sources in the area said that the Buttala, Dambayaya school issue was a case point, where the DIG using his personal contacts had urged donors to contribute to the schooling of children who had to move away from the village school after grade 5.

The DIG had also initiated a 24 hour traffic Policing system which included Policemen conducting random checks on vehicles.

 “This was a turning point, The Police were instructed to be vigilant on three 8 hour shifts. That meant that all the illegal activities of treasure hunting, illegal sand mining and transportation of ganja were curbed because the Police officers on duty were instructed to be vigilant on every moving vehicle. This created a major stir within many powerful people who resented it” a source said.

Thereafter at the District Development Committee meeting held on February 12 the local politicians had accused the DIG of being biased to which he retorted in the strongest possible terms. The local politicians had insisted on the transfer of the DIG and had threatened not to participate in any meeting until there demands were met and walked out of the meeting.

UNP Moneragala District parliamentarian Ranjith Maddumabandara speaking to the Daily Mirror alleged that the Police had succumbed to political pressure.

 “He was an officer who worked independently and this is the fate of such Police officers who work independently without fear or favor” he said.
Police say…

Police spokesman SSP Prishantha Jayakody denied that the transfer of the DIG had been due to political pressure.

 “There is no truth in the assertion that there was political pressure. In the letter of appointment to the DIG to the Badulla district it was stated that he would overlook the Moneragala District until a permanent DIG was appointed. Recently senior Police officers were promoted and therefore a different DIG was appointed to the Moneragala District. There was no transfer as such” he said. (Hafeel Farisz)
GSP+ removal woes continue


2013

Tamil Guardian 19 February 2013
The Sri Lankan General Secretary of the Free Trade Zones and General Services Employees’ Union (FTZ & GSEU), Anton Marcus, announced that the loss the European Union’s Generalised System of Preference Plus (GSP+) concessions to Sri Lanka has forced over 186 garment factories to close.
The trade union leader said that the number of factories had reduced from 835 to 500, resulting in the number of employees in the industry falling from 1 million to 283,000.
The European Union suspended the GSP+ tariff  in 2010, due to the Sri Lankan state’s failure to adhere with the fundamental human rights conventions that is expected of all recipients of the concession.

2006

Free Trade Zones and General Services Employees' Union (47 min. 2006)


Free Trade Zone Workers Union (48 min. Jesper Nordahl, 2006)
An interview, with Anton Marcus, General Secretary of the Free Trade Zone Workers Union, about the politics and impact of the FTZs, the establishment of the union and the policy and impact of WB, IMF and the polics initiated in Sri Lankan in 1977.
It is part of a series of works that investigates the political context and impact of Free Trade Zones and the Kotmale project that were initiated in the late seventies in Sri Lanka, as well as the resistance and alternatives to the policy WTO suggests for the country today.