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

Friday, March 8, 2013


A protest was held today at Vavuniya insisting the release of Tamil political prisoners and to trace the missing relatives.
 
This massive protest was held on the leadership of the coordinated federations of  "Finding the missing relatives" in the north and east and to notify the actual situation to Geneva.
 
The protesters were on a protest appealing to find their missing relatives assembled at Vavuniya Town council premises today morning and preceded towards the District Secretariat to handover a entreaty to Government Agent.
 
Police did not permit them to enter the office, and Government Agent Bandula Harichandra refused to accept the petition by meeting the people even from outside
 
However some representatives on behalf of the protestors could meet him was the information given by him is according to sources.
 
The people who were assembled with much anguish and pain said how the Government Agent could execute our necessities when he cannot understand our sensation and our misery.
 
Many questions were raised from those attended the protest, querying where is our children? Show them to us” the relatives sobbing and moaning were helpless and perturbed that a Government Agent who is in their region to serve them is unable to understand their feelings, and why should he prolong to serve them.
 
At this state, until their supplication is handed over to the Government Agent, the distressed protestors did not want to leave the locality, protested chanting with their pleas and it was pathetic to witness as they were seated in the boiling heat in the roadways. 
 
In view of this protest, the transportation through A9 road got obstructed. Due to this tension prevailed in the surrendering area of District Secretariat. 
 
 Ultimately Vavuniya District Additional Government Agent was compelled to take over the petition, because people demanded until our appeal consisting demands is accepted they would not budge from the A9 road and were continuing their protest.
 
Along with hundreds of relatives of missing persons,  Tamil National Alliance parliament members E.Saravanabawan, Sivasakthi Ananthan, Vino Nogarathalingam and religious dignitaries including public attended the protest.
 
 



மூன்றாம் இணைப்பு
Thursday , 07 March 2013 


President’s Assist. Secretary and top police officers are culprits in Slave Island 10 million heist !-vehicle used belongs to President’s fleet
http://www.lankaenews.com/English/images/logo.jpg
(Lanka-e-News -08.March.2013, 11.30PM) Can you beat that ! it has now come to light that the culprits in the broad daylight robbery of Rs. 10 million committed about a month ago by a group that came in a defender vehicle under the guise of police personnel at Hunupitiya, on two individuals who were traveling in a vehicle after collecting cash from Sampath Bank Slave Island Van , are none other than the assistant Secretary of the President of SL , the mastermind behind this heist and a group of high ranking officers of the police.

It is learnt that tremendous efforts are being made to suppress the information that the assistant secretary of the Presidential secretariat is involved. Among those who were arrested are the OIC of the Fort traffic police division R D B Adhikari I P. Another is the chief security officer , Mahesh De Silva of the Minister Priyankara Jayaratne’s Ministerial Security Division, and a Police Constable of the CID

The complainant had received death threats today in the night at 8.40 that if the defender vehicle of the President’s pool of vehicles that was used by the Assist. Secretary to the President for this highway robbery is identified, he will be murdered. Thereafter , the CID Colombo division had recorded a statement that the defender vehicle could not be identified. Yet in the first complaint the complainant had stated he could identify the defender vehicle. By now orders from the top had gone to see to it that the defender identification of the defender vehicle as belonging to the President’s fleet be concealed.

On the 12th of February when this robbery was committed Hollywood film style by these criminals , underlining the lawlessness and the upsurge in crime wave in SL , Lanka e news reported the incident as follows :

‘Two individuals who came in a car No. 85-5615 collected a sum of Rs. Ten million at about 12.30 p.m. from the Sampath Bank situated in front of Nawaloka hospital within the Slave Island police division . When they were traveling in the car at Navam Mawatha after collecting the cash, an individual in a dress like that of a police man had stopped it. At the same time several individuals who came in a defender vehicle had alighted from it , and pulled out the two persons from the car and taken them into their defender vehicle while also seizing the car , and taken them to Kotte . There after relieving the abducted individuals of the cash and abandoning them , they have fled taking the car also along with them.’

Attack on Indian fishermen: Lanka refuses to learn

Oneindia NewsLanka refuses to learn
Posted by: Prahlad Published: Friday, March 8, 2013

Read more at: http://news.oneindia.in/2013/03/08/attack-on-indian-fishermen-lanka-refuses-to-learn-1166837.html

New Delhi, March 8: The attack on four fishermen from Karaikal by Sri Lankan Coast Guard personnel while fishing off Kodiakarai coast comes at a time when India is caught in a bind on the voting on the upcoming UN rights panel resolution on Sri Lanka. Five Karaikal-based fishermen had ventured into the sea on March 2 in a fibre glass boat and were fishing off Kodiakarai last night when Lankan Coast Guard personnel surrounded them and boarded their vessel. They allegedly threw chilli powder and ice cubes besides attacking them with wooden logs and fled, he said. One fisherman managed to escape unhurt as he hid near the boat's engines. The injured fishermen returned to shore today and have been admitted to the Karaikal General Hospital, he said. The attack comes a day after a 40-year-old fishermen was wounded in the shoulder after Lankan navy personnel allegedly fired at their fishing boats. Taking a serious view of the attack and firing on fishermen, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa yesterday in a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had said that these incidents should be viewed as an "indirect attempt to intimidate India and browbeat it into not raising its voice" against Sri Lanka on the Tamil issue at the international fora, which is highly unacceptable. Meanwhile, describing the plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka as a "huge humanitarian problem" which has to end, External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid said Thursday that India will ask the island nation's government for an independent inquiry into allegations of human rights violations there. The government is in a fix on which way vote on the US-sponsored resolution against Sri Lanka. It has become more complex after the US circulated draft recommends an "independent international investigation." The Indian government sources have been indicating that they were going to vote along with the US so far, the "independent international investigation" may make it difficult for India to vote on it, as it goes against the Indian principles of non-interference. Khurshid had said yesterday that "a closure must be brought to the 27 years of violence and India does not want to play policeman or big brother". "I know there are reports of human rights violations. The bottom line remains that devolution (of power) which gives legitimate rights must be implemented in toto," he asserted in the Lok Sabha while replying to a debate on the plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka. "This is a huge humanitarian problem. This involves both the heart and the head. Our generation has to find a solution to this problem. This has gone on for too long," Khurshid had said adding: "This has to end. It is clear that we want all citizens, particularly Tamils, to live as participants in a democracy."

Read more at: http://news.oneindia.in/2013/03/08/attack-on-indian-fishermen-lanka-refuses-to-learn-1166837.html

Lanka’s economic slowdown likely to intensify: report

* Monetary policy could ease 100bps, exporters hit by GSP Plus withdrawal


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The economic slow down experienced in 2012 is expected to intensify this year on high credit costs, a weak currency and the fragile state of export markets, a leading ratings and research agency said.

Business Monitor International (BMI), a leading, independent provider of proprietary data, analysis, ratings, rankings and forecasts covering 175 countries and 22 industry sectors in a special report on Sri Lanka pointed out that economic growth would reach 5.4 percent this year, lower than estimates of the IMF (6.25 percent) and government ( 7/7.5 percent).

"We do not see the island’s economic growth turning up until H213 at the very earliest, implying that the ongoing slowdown will likely intensify in H113," the agency, specialising in emerging markets, economics, country risk, forecasts, analysis, industry research and company intelligence said.

"We are keeping to our 5.4% full-year real GDP growth forecast for the year. The island’s economy is still feeling the pinch on multiply fronts - the high credit costs, the weak Sri Lankan rupee, and the fragile state of developed markets," it said.

"With price concerns gradually coming off the table, we believe that the primary focus of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL)’s policies over the coming twelve months will be fixed on economic growth. We are projecting 100 basis points (bps) worth of additional easing in 2013, taking the reverse repo rate to 8.50% by end-2013. Crucially, the CBSL’s annual Road Map signals further loosening of monetary policy in the months ahead.

"Currency stability is likely to be the overriding theme going forward as the central bank looks to foster some sense of it after a fairly volatile 2012. The CBSL explicitly expressed exchange rate stability as one of its policy priorities in its annual Road Map for the year ahead, reiterating its willingness to intervene if need be.

"We have long cautioned that the political unassailability of the ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) greatly increases the risk of government overreach. Recent developments, such as the highly controversial impeachment of the chief justice, have only bolstered our view.

"More than two and a half years after the EU decided to withdraw preferential tariff benefits to Sri Lanka, it appears that the country’s exporters are now beginning to feel the economic squeeze. The ruling government’s inadequate progress on the human rights front suggests to us that these privileges are unlikely to be reinstated any time soon."

Rs. 10 m Robbery: 7 including 3 cops arrested

FRIDAY, 08 MARCH 2013
Seven suspects including three police officers were arrested today in connection with the Rs.10 million robbery in Slave Island last month, police said.

Police spokesman Buddhika Siriwardena said a police team led by Colombo Crime Division DIG Anura Senanayake made the arrests at various locations in Colombo.

Two traffic police officers and one Ministerial Security Division (MSD) member were among those arrested.

The police spokesman said a part of the stolen money had been recovered while investigations are continuing to retrieve the balance.

In a daring daylight robbery, a group led by a person posing as a traffic policeman robbed Rs. ten million from a businessman in the Gangaramaya area in Slave Island on February 12.

The businessman was travelling with his wife towards the Gangaramaya Temple area with his wife when a traffic policeman had ordered them to stop the van.

Within minutes a defender had come and parked in front of the van. Four men had got down from the vehicle and pulled away the driver from his seat.
The four men had got into the van with the person dressed as a policeman and fled towards Pitakotte where the driver was thrown out of it.

According to the victim, the suspects had shouted at him saying ‘If you want the van come to Peliyagoda and collect it’.

He had then lodged a complaint at the Colombo Crime Division (CCD). The van was found abandoned in Dematagoda a few hours later. (Sanath Desmond)

Related story

Keheliya, Boys Will Be Boys, But Where Are The Men?

Colombo TelegraphBy Ravi Perera -March 8, 2013 
Ravi Perera
Trying to explain , perhaps down-play , the youthful  brawl in a resort hotel on the Eastern coast a Minister who is  the government spokesman  used the old idiom  “ boys will be boys…” . The boys in this case were   a son of a senior Minister who with his companions had allegedly assaulted another “boy”, the victim needing hospitalization as a result of the injuries sustained. The injured is a son of a senior Police officer, a Deputy Inspector General. There were no reports of injury to the assailants.
Apparently, the quarrel began when the son of the DIG objected to a youngster in the company of the Minister’s son taking a photograph which he thought may have intentionally or otherwise “captured” his wife who was walking past. The intended subject of the photograph was another young man evidently with little clothes on him. The DIG’s son  had demanded that the photographer show him the digital image. The photographer refused to oblige which resulted in the brawl. It is said that the group with the Minister’s son had been after liquor.
The details as reported are mundane and typical of your everyday youthful broil anywhere in the world. As any  psychologist would explain the adolescence  are difficult  transient years for a young man to handle, when you are neither a child nor a fully fledged adult yet .But as we view  such incidents in the  context of the Sri Lankan culture , there is another , a sinister dimension to a young man’s  coming of age , particularly when they involve children of those  we commonly refer to as VIPs.
We must consider the victim, at least by the fact of marriage, more advanced   in his passage to adulthood. The opposite group ,  with the Minister’s   son, apparently younger  in age, seems  to have had  a boozy fun time ,  with no care in the world ,no rules  applicable and  money not a consideration.
Most of us, particularly when travelling, would have sometime or the other become a part of the background in many a photograph involuntarily. Although those with a more developed sense of social etiquette would endeavour not to walk in front of a camera or avoid unnecessary subjects when using one, sometimes you cannot help such things from happening. One wonders if anyone else other than a son of a DIG would have demanded that he be shown the images of photographs taken in a public place. In this country we all know that the Police are not only a force to maintain law and order but are a power to be reckoned with. That power could extend to the family and even friends of Police officers.
On the other hand, the Ministers son and his friends thought nothing of brutally assaulting a young man who was heavily outnumbered. They attacked him right in front of his wife. It is clear that they had no fear of consequences, and in fact the manner in which events unfolded confirmed their confidence.  They also did not think that their conduct was socially or morally unacceptable. Maybe it was a necessary ritual on their way on manliness   as defined in the milieu they are familiar with.
This incident is just one of the many cases in recent times where children of VIP’s, particularly politicians, have assaulted and debased others purely on the basis of the impunity they apparently enjoy. Even army and police officers, who are also no angels, have been publicly humiliated by them.
Obviously, the phrase “boys will be boys” have a different meaning when we examine these incidents so symptomatic of the broad culture of the country and particularly that concerning the exercise of power. These boys will be boys only when certain circumstances are fulfilled. The most important condition for their conduct seems to be the fact that their fathers have to be in the governing party or holding high office in the forces. When the father is out of power the level testosterones   in the boys seem to recede rapidly.  Secondly, just like the father, the boy also must have behind him security officers provided by the State.  Thirdly, either the security or the young man will have a gun with him, which puts him at a tremendous advantage over his adversary. In addition, the other symbols of their ilk, those huge four wheel drives, convoys, young men and women who invariably provide a kind of entourage to the brat go to make up the show.
In most other cultures such young men would be considered pathetic cowards and parasites on the public purse. But not so, here in Sri Lanka. Those who remember that era would recall that the nascent tigers of Tamil terrorism were also called the “boys” by their elders. That seems a description that comes easily in this country when we seek to excuse the conduct of a youthful offender. The problem   however is that we have far too many “boys” but so few “men” here. Oh God, when will you give us the men of the kind that Josiah Gilbert Holland demanded?
GOD, give us men!
A time like this demands
Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and ready hands;
Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
Men whom the spoils of office cannot buy;
Men who possess opinions and a will;
Men who have honor; men who will not lie;
Men who can stand before a demagogue
And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking!
Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
In public duty, and in private thinking;
For while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds,
Their large professions and their little deeds,
Mingle in selfish strife, lo! Freedom weeps,
Wrong rules the land and waiting Justice sleeps.

Who killed Hugo Chavez – and why?

k out my new article at Press TV:

 

Chavez: Another CIA assassination victim?

 Wednesday, March 6th, 2013
“Am I 100% certain that the CIA killed Hugo Chavez? Absolutely not.
“It could have been non-governmental assassins working for the bankers.”
I go on to discuss the sorry history of bankster assassinations of Latin American leaders brave enough to stand up for their own people.
So we know that Chavez was assassinated. We know more or less who did it.
As to the “why,” Greg Palast has ably filled in the details in his article, reprinted below.
-KB

Vaya con Dios, Hugo Chàvez, mi Amigo

By Greg Palas – www.gregpalast.com


Tuesday, March 5, 2013For BBC Television, Palast met several times with Hugo Chàvez, who passed away today.
As a purgative for the crappola fed to Americans about Chavez, my foundation, The Palast Investigative Fund, is offering the film, The Assassination of Hugo Chavez, as a FREE download. Based on my several meetings with Chavez, his kidnappers and his would-be assassins, filmed for BBC Television. DVDs also available.
Media may contact Palast at interviews (at) gregpalast.com.
Venezuelan President Chavez once asked me why the US elite wanted to kill him. My dear Hugo: It’s the oil. And it’s the Koch Brothers – and it’s the ketchup.
Reverend Pat Robertson said,
“Hugo Chavez thinks we’re trying to assassinate him. I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it.”
It was 2005 and Robertson was channeling the frustration of George Bush’s State Department.
Despite Bush’s providing intelligence, funds and even a note of congratulations to the crew who kidnapped Chavez (we’ll get there), Hugo remained in office, reelected and wildly popular.
But why the Bush regime’s hate, hate, HATE of the President of Venezuela?
Reverend Pat wasn’t coy about the answer: It’s the oil.
“This is a dangerous enemy to our South controlling a huge pool of oil.”
A really BIG pool of oil. Indeed, according to Guy Caruso, former chief of oil intelligence for the CIA, Venezuela hold a recoverable reserve of 1.36 trillion barrels, that is, a whole lot more than Saudi Arabia.
If we didn’t kill Chavez, we’d have to do an “Iraq” on his nation. So the Reverend suggests,
“We don’t need another $200 billion war….It’s a whole lot easier to have some of the covert operatives do the job and then get it over with.”
Chavez himself told me he was stunned by Bush’s attacks: Chavez had been quite chummy with Bush Senior and with Bill Clinton.
So what made Chavez suddenly “a dangerous enemy”? Here’s the answer you won’t find in The New York Times:
Just after Bush’s inauguration in 2001, Chavez’ congress voted in a new “Law of Hydrocarbons.” Henceforth, Exxon, British Petroleum, Shell Oil and Chevron would get to keep 70% of the sales revenues from the crude they sucked out of Venezuela. Not bad, considering the price of oil was rising toward $100 a barrel.
But to the oil companies, which had bitch-slapped Venezeula’s prior government into giving them 84% of the sales price, a cut to 70% was “no bueno.” Worse, Venezuela had been charging a joke of a royalty – just one percent – on “heavy” crude from the Orinoco Basin. Chavez told Exxon and friends they’d now have to pay 16.6%.
Clearly, Chavez had to be taught a lesson about the etiquette of dealings with Big Oil.
On April 11, 2002, President Chavez was kidnapped at gunpoint and flown to an island prison in the Caribbean Sea. On April 12, Pedro Carmona, a business partner of the US oil companies and president of the nation’s Chamber of Commerce, declared himself President of Venezuela – giving a whole new meaning to the term, “corporate takeover.”
U.S. Ambassador Charles Shapiro immediately rushed down from his hilltop embassy to have his picture taken grinning with the self-proclaimed “President” and the leaders of the coup d’état.
Bush’s White House spokesman admitted that Chavez was, “democratically elected,” but, he added, “Legitimacy is something that is conferred not by just the majority of voters.” I see.
With an armed and angry citizenry marching on the Presidential Palace in Caracas ready to string up the coup plotters, Carmona, the Pretend President from Exxon returned his captive Chavez back to his desk within 48 hours. (How? Get The Assassination of Hugo Chavez, the film, expanding on my reports for BBC Television. You can download it for free for the next few days.)
Chavez had provoked the coup not just by clawing back some of the bloated royalties of the oil companies. It’s what he did with that oil money that drove Venezuela’s One Percent to violence.
In Caracas, I ran into the reporter for a TV station whose owner is generally credited with plotting the coup against the president. While doing a publicity photo shoot, leaning back against a tree, showing her wide-open legs nearly up to where they met, the reporter pointed down the hill to the “ranchos,” the slums above Caracas, where shacks, once made of cardboard and tin, where quickly transforming into homes of cinder blocks and cement.
“He [Chavez] gives them bread and bricks, so they vote for him, of course.” She was disgusted by “them,” the 80% of Venezuelans who are negro e indio (Black and Indian)—and poor. Chavez, himself negro e indio, had, for the first time in Venezuela’s history, shifted the oil wealth from the privileged class that called themselves “Spanish,” to the dark-skinned masses.
While trolling around the poor housing blocks of Caracas, I ran into a local, Arturo Quiran, a merchant seaman and no big fan of Chavez. But over a beer at his kitchen table, he told me,
“Fifteen years ago under [then-President] Carlos Andrés Pérez, there was a lot of oil money in Venezuela. The ‘oil boom’ we called it. Here in Venezuela there was a lot of money, but we didn’t see it.”
But then came Hugo Chavez, and now the poor in his neighborhood, he said, “get medical attention, free operations, x-rays, medicines; education also. People who never knew how to write now know how to sign their own papers.”
Chavez’ Robin Hood thing, shifting oil money from the rich to the poor, would have been grudgingly tolerated by the US. But Chavez, who told me, “We are no longer an oil colony,” went further…too much further, in the eyes of the American corporate elite.
Venezuela had landless citizens by the millions – and unused land by the millions of acres tied up, untilled, on which a tiny elite of plantation owners squatted. Chavez’ congress passed in a law in 2001 requiring untilled land to be sold to the landless. It was a program long promised by Venezuela’s politicians at the urging of John F. Kennedy as part of his “Alliance for Progress.”
Plantation owner Heinz Corporation didn’t like that one bit. In retaliation, Heinz closed its ketchup plant in the state of Maturin and fired all the workers. Chavez seized Heinz’ plant and put the workers back on the job. Chavez didn’t realize that he’d just squeezed the tomatoes of America’s powerful Heinz family and Mrs. Heinz’ husband, Senator John Kerry, now U.S. Secretary of State.
Or, knowing Chavez as I do, he didn’t give a damn.
Chavez could survive the ketchup coup, the Exxon “presidency,” even his taking back a piece of the windfall of oil company profits, but he dangerously tried the patience of America’s least forgiving billionaires: The Koch Brothers.
How? Well, that’s another story for another day. [Watch this space. Or read about it in the book, Billionaires & Ballot Bandits. Go to BallotBandits.org).
Elected presidents who annoy Big Oil have ended up in exile—or coffins: Mossadegh of Iran after he nationalized BP’s fields (1953), Elchibey, President of Azerbaijan, after he refused demands of BP for his Caspian fields (1993), President Alfredo Palacio of Ecuador after he terminated Occidental’s drilling concession (2005).
“It’s a chess game, Mr. Palast,” Chavez told me. He was showing me a very long, and very sharp sword once owned by Simon Bolivar, the Great Liberator. “And I am,” Chavez said, “a very good chess player.”
In the film The Seventh Seal, a medieval knight bets his life on a game of chess with the Grim Reaper. Death cheats, of course, and takes the knight. No mortal can indefinitely outplay Death who, this week, Chavez must know, will checkmate the new Bolivar of Venezuela.
But in one last move, the Bolivarian grandmaster played a brilliant endgame, naming Vice-President Nicolas Maduro, as good and decent a man as they come, as heir to the fight for those in the “ranchos.” The One Percent of Venezuela, planning on Chavez’s death to return them the power and riches they couldn’t win in an election, are livid with the choice of Maduro.
Chavez sent Maduro to meet me in my downtown New York office back in 2004. In our run-down detective digs on Second Avenue, Maduro and I traded information on assassination plots and oil policy.
Even then, Chavez was carefully preparing for the day when Venezuela’s negros e indios would lose their king—but still stay in the game.
Class war on a chessboard. Even in death, I wouldn’t bet against Hugo Chavez.
Kudu Duminda drama is absolutely false: photos presented by Lawyer are doctored
http://www.lankaenews.com/English/images/logo.jpg
(Lanka-e-News-08.March.2013,3.00PM) Hemantha Warnakulasooriya and the team of lawyers for R Duminda De Silva alias kudu Duminda who is a suspect in the Baratha Lakshman murder, have told a profusion of lies in order to mislead the court, according to reports reaching Lanka e news. 

Our inside information service personnel that visited Nawaloka hospital where Duminda is warded confirm that he is not in such a serious condition as to preclude him from getting down from bed.

The remand number of kudu Duminda who is in naval remand custody is 509/ 2013 and is patient No. 7727 at the Nawaloka hospital. He is warded in second floor for VVIPs in a super luxury room , seventh in the row. He is enjoying himself joking and speaking freely , while taking phone calls . He doesn’t display any ailing qualities of a serious patient. To the mother who brought him some porridge , he had said , ‘are you mad to bring porridge for me? I am not suffering from any sickness.’ . Besides , until today he has not consumed any medicine while in hospital.

When the Magistrate arrived , he had been pretending to be asleep , and after he left, he had continued his activities normally and perfectly. In other words , kudu Duminda’s lawyer Warnakulasooriya had deceived the court absolutely. 

The photograph produced to the media on that day by Warnakulasooriya where kudu Duminda looks like Hindi actor Amir Khan in ‘Gajini’ is a false and deceitful one. The lawyer Warnakulasuriya ,over the TV channel said , the photograph was taken on that day. But actually now Duminda Siva is with a full head of hair , and there doesn’t seem to be such a scar on his head, based on reports of the Lanka e news inside information team that visited him to learn of the truth.

The tale that he cannot be produced before court lest an infection may enter his head is an absolute lie. In that case, was the plane in which he arrived disinfected ? Is he now in the ICU? Isn’t any ordinary ward , infection prone? Did the Magistrate go to see him after disinfecting himself ? These stories therefore of his critical condition are ‘bailas’ which only fools and ‘kuddas’ will believe , not intelligent people.

The medical specialists have stated that the photograph submitted by Warnakulasoriya to court on that day and previously, supposed to be of Duminda when surgery was performed on his head are also absolute lies.

To get an insight into the true situation , Lank e news inquired from a Doctor who was in the team that performed surgery on Duminda initially at the Jayawardenapura hospital. He said that no photographs of Duminda was taken at that stage. Moreover , he confirmed without doubt that no surgery in SL was done that bears out the scar on his head which suggests that his head was split into two. Lanka e news then investigated whether this photograph produced by the Lawyer was that taken in Singapore.

A surgeon who has over 25years experience in brain surgery working in London told us there is no trace of doubt at all that this photograph depicts not the scars following a surgical intervention but it is some picture based on an autopsy performed on some dead individual.

The surgeon who said it is not a photograph depicting the surgery that they are trying to make out , and added that this can be a video footage recorded by the miniature camera used by the surgeon . 
Sometimes because of the doubt that the doctors may become liable for compensation claim in courts , in some surgical operations , the miniature video camera with them records the events supported by the illumination provided by the light fixed on their heads. Or else , in special cases of surgery for future academic purposes , there are instances where such video recordings are done , he pointed out.

In any case , it is confirmed that this photograph is not one taken during such a surgical operation because the second photograph shows that the surgery has not been one which involved taking out the brain from its original position. The surgeon also laughingly said , it is ridiculous to try to create the hilarious impression that when performing a brain operation , the brain is taken out like an engine of a car is taken out for repair , dismantled and then fixed back . Therefore he went on to ask whether the lawyer who distorted the true position , the courts of SL and the media which accepted them are that stupid as not to understand the silliness in these misrepresentations.

Herein is a photograph which depicts a true surgical operation on the head. This clearly by comparison testifies to the falsity and spuriousness of the doctored photograph presented by Warnakulasuriya of Duminda Silva’s operation. The blood flow and the bandages used to stop the flow in the true brain surgery photograph are non existent in Duminda’s doctored photo . It is only when a corpse or its brain is being cut there is no blood flow.

Lawyers like Warnakulasooriya who prove the truth in the old adage that ‘lawyers are liars’ , and Dumindas who prove that with kudu earnings they can conquer the world cannot be allowed to ride roughshod on the laws and the people of the country.

Kindly note that we cannot reveal the names of the doctors and medical experts who revealed the true picture by expressing their knowledgeable and expert opinions, cannot be divulged on security grounds.


Rs. 207 Million At Sri Lanka Insurance Has Been Swindled

Colombo TelegraphBy Colombo Telegraph -March 8, 2013
A large sum of money amounting to 207 million rupees at Sri Lanka Insurance has been swindled as a result of the selection of an insurance broker whose license had been cancelled, Transparency International reports. This has occurred in connection with the reinsuring the properties of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation. This allegation is being made by the the Coalition against Corruption.
The Coalition states that as a result, the assets of the Corporation have no insurance protection. An investigation on the matter has already been conducted by COPE – the Parliamentary Committee on Public Enterprises.
The Coalition alleges that the reinsurance broker concerned is an Indian named Suresh Balakrishnan who had been involved in a similar fraud while serving at M.F. Insurance and Reinsurance and the Indian authorities had cancelled his license. At an investigation by the Auditor General’s Department it has been revealed that he had not paid the premium Rs 92 million that had to be paid for 2009/2010 to the reinsurance companies in respect of the assets of the Petroleum Corporation. The broker had done the reinsurance under Transasia Management Advisor FZC from United Arab Emirates.
Subsequently, the Rs. 116 million (Rs. 116,850,000/-) reinsurance premium for the Petroleum Corporation for the year 2010/2011 has been paid to Suresh Balakrishnan on 02.07.2010 by the officials of Sri Lanka Insurance on a request made by Balakrishnan the previous day. Thus the total amount of reinsurance is Rs. 208 M.
It is the general practice worldwide to insure highly valuable property among several reinsurance companies in order to ensure that any liability is distributed among them. For this purpose the service of reputed brokers are made use of.
The total value of the assets of the Petroleum Corporation which presently have no insurance cover is estimated to be Rs.75.39 billion (75,97,909,813/-). These include the Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery, oil stocks stored at the refinery, the Sapugaskanda boiler, Orugodawatta terminal, oil stocks at the terminal, property at the Katunayake International Airport and oil stocks there, and the oil stocks at Muthurajawela.

Book Review: Wave By Sonali Deraniyagala

By Marcia Kaye -March 8, 2013
Colombo TelegraphIt’s almost inconceivable that a memoir of such exquisite beauty could arise from an event as tragically horrific as the Asian tsunami of 2004. But Sonali Deraniyagala has created exactly that. In her starkly titled true story Wave, she describes losing her entire family — her husband, their two young sons and her parents, who all vanished under the water within a few terrible seconds. But slowly, agonizingly, she has put her life back together, chiefly through piecing together memories of her lost family members. She has brought them vividly to life for us, producing a fiercely moving tribute to them and a life-affirming testament to the strength of anyone —and all those — who have ever survived tragic loss. In a tribute on the book’s cover, Michael Ondaatje, the Sri Lankan-born Canadian author (The English Patient) calls Wave "the most powerful and haunting book I’ve read in years."
Deraniyagala, who was teaching economics at the University of London, was on a family holiday that fateful Christmas in the country of her birth, staying at a seaside resort on Sri Lanka’s southern coast. Since we know the tsunami’s toll from the outset (230,000), Deraniyagala’s opening is ominous. "I thought nothing of it at first," she begins. "The ocean looked a little closer than usual. That is all." Within moments she and her husband, Steve, grabbed Vikram, almost eight, and Malli, five, and jumped into a jeep that tried unsuccessfully to outrun the churning water. Deraniyagala survived by clinging to a branch. The other five members of her family vanished. She never saw them again.
How does one cope after such a loss? As Deraniyagala tells it, one doesn’t. In shock and with a raging infection from having consumed so much filthy water, she can’t accept her family is gone. "They are my world. How do I make them dead? My mind toppled."
She takes us through the months-long bedlam of her grief. Cared for by relatives in Colombo, she initially refuses to drink anything alcoholic to help her sleep. But before long she’s polishing off half a bottle of vodka by late afternoon. Her relatives ration sleeping pills, but she easily buys hallucinogens from the corner pharmacy without a prescription. She doesn’t smoke but she stubs out lit cigarettes on her skin. Her relatives hide all the knives. She’s torn: she needs to remember; she needs to forget.
After six months Deraniyagala steels herself to revisit the site of the resort, accompanied by her father-in-law. Remarkably, they find vestiges of her family in that now-stark landscape: the laminated back cover of her husband’s research paper, a half-buried piece of Vikram’s green shirt, blue satin fabric from one of Malli’s dress-up costumes entangled on the branch of a dead tree.
It’s almost two years before she’s able to return to London, and another two before she can set foot in her house. As she sees her boys’ shoes by the bedroom door and an onion peel in a clay pot from the last beef curry Steve made, she’s able to start putting together fragments of the lives of her loved ones. This enables us to know them too, as she remembers Vik’s obsession with cricket, Malli’s theatrics, Steve’s culinary skills, her mother’s love of gossip, her father’s law library.
Deraniyagala explores both the predictable aspects of her grief, such as feelings of being completely bereft, as well as the unexpected ones; for instance, blame and shame. "I lost my dignity when I lost them," she writes. Her identity now escapes her. Is she still a mother? A daughter? She feels laid bare, her "story" too awful to divulge whenever a new acquaintance asks if she’s married or has children. Yet in not revealing the truth she feels deceitful. "I stun myself each time I retell the truth to myself, let alone someone else." She’s horrified that by mourning her sons first, then her husband, then her parents, there may be a pecking order to her grief.
But in discovering, or perhaps creating, a new identity — she is now a visiting research scholar at Columbia University in New York, working on issues of economic development, including post-disaster recovery — she doesn’t discard the old identity.Wave is somehow both jaggedly raw and beautifully crafted at the same time. Above all, it speaks to the power of the human spirit to survive, to love, to remember. It reminds us that these often mundane lives of ours and our families’ must be cherished, because we never know when an extraordinary event may come along to change it all.
Marcia Kaye is an author and journalist who spent time in Sri Lanka before the tsunami.

MP Padmasisri Apologises To LSSP And Escapes Punishment

By Colombo Telegraph -March 8, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphY.G. Padmasiri, the Kegalle District MP who violated the decision of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party and voted for the impeachment of Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake has escaped punishment by apologizing to the Party, Colombo Telegraph understands.
Y.G. Padmasiri
The LSSP’s Central Committee met last weekend to decide on what action should be taken against MP Padmasiri. While Minister Tissa Vitarana had proposed that no action be taken, most members had demanded that stern action be taken as this was not the first time Padmasiri had violated party discipline. When the 18th Amendmentwas taken up in Parliament, both Vitarana and Padmasiri voted for it against the decision of the LSSP that its MPs should abstain from voting. Both were severely reprimanded by the Party.
Colombo Telegraph learns that Padmasiri had finally asked for forgiveness from the Party. He had stated that he was not like Athauda Seneviratne who joined the SLFP. If expelled, he would apply to re-join the party, Padmasiri had stated. The Central Committee had considered his plea for mercy and warned him severely.
Padmasiri had expected to be appointed a Deputy Minister at the last Cabinet reshuffle as a reward for voting against the LSSP decision but is disappointed that he was not considered, LSSPers from Ruwanwella told Colombo Telegraph.