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

Tuesday, March 12, 2013


Pursuit Of Happiness: A Wild Goose Chase?

By Charitha Ratwatte -March 12, 2013 
Charitha Ratwatte
Colombo TelegraphThe American Declaration of Independence, in its second paragraph states that “… all Men are created equal, and that they are endowed… with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
The Oxford Dictionary tells us that being ‘happy’ is being cheerful with feelings of pleasure or satisfaction. ‘Satisfaction’ is, in turn, when you are pleased because you have achieved something or because something has happened as you wanted it to. A synonym is being ‘content’ being happy and satisfied with what you have.
Rulers have constantly tried to measure happiness as an indicator of the quality of life of the ruled. The idea behind the attempt to measure ‘happiness’ by government is to ensure that governments can make their voters ‘happy’. It would be good for governments to keep in mind Samuel Coleridge’s comment in The Three Graves: ‘We ne’er can be, made happy by compulsion!’
Some define happiness as the satisfaction of the will. If you succeed in obtaining what you have been dreaming of, can you be said to be happy? Pursuing this definition of happiness, a person may do countless things, spending all his time, money, energy and skill, to make his life happy. But would such happiness be sustainable?
If something perishable, changeable and impermanent is procured in the pursuit of happiness, it is bound to slip away from his grasp as definitely as night follows day. Then unhappiness will result. Experience shows that education does not bring happiness, neither does wealth bring happiness.
The Buddha’s view
The Buddha taught that happiness can be eradicated by eliminating the craving for happiness and all worldly things. The Buddha explained that one gains happiness through the association with the wise and the avoidance of fools. “Good is the sight of the Noble Ones; happy always is it to live with them; away from the sight of fools, one would always be happy.”
Generosity or Dana makes the giver happy. But in the last resort the Buddha made it clear that the path to happiness is through the purification of the mind. The Buddha said: “Our actions are all led by the mind, the mind is their master, mind is their maker. If one acts or speaks with a pure state of mind then happiness follows like a shadow that trails constantly behind.”
Happiness is therefore most certainly generated by the by the mind freed from factors which oppose it, that is free from craving. Doing good deeds with a pure mind is a source of happiness. The Buddha explained that there are three stages to happiness: moral behaviour (Sila), concentration (Samadhi) and wisdom (Panna). Living a good moral life is a source of happiness. So also concentration of the mind through the practice of meditation. The realisation of the truth, the wisdom so achieved is the third stage of happiness which frees the mind of craving
Gross Domestic Product
But in the material world we live in, sustainable is defined as something which survives and can be maintained without change. One measure adopted by rulers, encouraged by their economic pundits, is the Gross Domestic Product, better known by its initials, GDP, which also has been the professional economists’ chosen measure of a nation’s wellbeing over the years.
Economic growth is assumed to equate to wellbeing. However it is well recognised to have serious limitations, for example it takes no account of environmental pollution and degradation, which negatively affects sustainability, also it excludes all unpaid services which exist in the economy, such as volunteering and domestic housework – homemaking. Robert Kennedy, Attorney General of the USA and brother of President John. F. Kennedy, put it succinctly, when he said that GDP “measures everything… except that which makes life worthwhile!”
Economic performance measured by Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is a measure of the value of goods and services produced in a country. It has been defined as the total of all economic activity in one country, regardless of who owns the productive assets. However, it has many flaws and does not even measure the value of goods and services precisely. Further people’s feelings of happiness or satisfaction or optimism also depend on things GDP does not capture.
Freedom and happiness
The reference to the liberty in the American constitution, has led, together with other constitutional principles developed in other parts of the world, to a theoretical nexus being developed between, the level of freedom in a society and the level of happiness. Is there a connection between the quantum of freedom and the level of happiness? The measurement of the quantum of freedom is connected to the issue of basic rights.
Safeguarding the right o the individual necessarily envisages placing restrictions on the state interfering with his rights. Both international treaties and national laws limit the right of the state to impinge upon individual rights. The fundamental principle is that an individual has been endowed, by custom, tradition, religious beliefs and humanitarian considerations, among others, with certain essential and inherent rights, which must be respected and protected, if society is to be just. If the rulers are to be considered as just rulers.
These rights range from freedom of thought, conscience and religion, freedom from torture, discrimination, arbitrary arrest and detention, freedom of speech and association and association and freedom. But these freedoms cannot and are not unlimited. Social cohesion and control requires that for a community to be functional and not dysfunctional and anarchy, there must be reasonable limitations of individual freedoms. The state therefore, with consent of the people, imposes restraints on the exercise and enjoyment of individual rights in the interest of good governance and the very existence, survival, safety and security of the state, as a voluntary grouping of citizens and their communities.
A nation’s basic law or constitution reflects this trade off. The emphasis is shifted away from the primacy of individual rights to the recognition of common and community rights to which individual rights are subordinated. However it is a fine line of demarcation. Much disputed.
For example the principle of absolute freedom of contract of the parties to an agreement, is most times subordinated to the higher moral aspiration of equity and social justice and the protection of weaker segments of the community from the economically and socially powerful.
Today environmental and ecological obligations also play a powerful role. For example, the current much debated trade off which is highly controversial, over the ability of the department of Wildlife Conservation and the safari jeep drivers at the Yala National Park to earn a maximum income by taking large numbers of tourists into the park, and the deleterious effect of such over visitation on the fauna and the flora of a very vulnerable eco system.
These sort of issues took primacy at UN gathering in Brazil, the Rio +20 World Sustainability Conference, those that were concerned enough to attend, that is- the major players simply kept away! The 238 point final agreement, entitled ‘The Future We Want,’ was arrived on the day appointed for the conference to end, a sure sign for an ineffective UN conference, there was no real controversy, where there are controversial ‘real’ issues raised, the meetings go on until the early hours of the morning, trying to hammer out a compromise. The EU’s climate change commissioner commented on the final communiqué: “Telling that nobody in that room adopting the text was happy. That’s how weak it is.”
A growing number of ordinary people around the world are recognising the mutual interconnectedness of these issues and the need to think of a way to evolve a measure of development which would capture the real situation of the status of humanity as to their thinking of their present and future. How is ‘sustainable progress’ to be measured in the 21st century? The traditional indicators of economic activity simply don’t tell us enough about ordinary peoples hopes, goals and aspirations.
The Happy Planet Index
It is this realisation that prompted the United Nations to host a High Level meeting on Happiness and Well Being. For the same reason the few world leaders who actually attended Rio +20 were involved in negotiations on development indicators which ‘would go beyond GDP’.
The New Economics Foundation, responding to this need has created a Happy Planet Index (HPI). The HPI is considered to be one of the leading global measures of sustainable wellbeing. As a measure of human progress, it measures the extent to which countries deliver long, happy, sustainable lives for their citizens.
The 2012 HPI report published on 14 June 2012 ranks 151 countries based on their efficiency – defined as the extent to which each nation produces long and happy lives for their citizens, per unit of environmental input. Clearly the results show that we are not living on a happy planet. No country has good performance on three critical indicators – life expectancy, experiential wellbeing and ecological footprint. Some countries certainly do well, but maybe not the ones you expected.
None of the top 10 in the HPI are the world’s rich countries. Of the top 40 in the HPI, only four have a GDP per capita of over $ 15,000. The highest ranking Western nation is Norway at 28. New Zealand is 29th. Costa Rica leads the HPI table, with its very high life expectancy, high experiential wellbeing and an ecological footprint one-third of the USA’s. The HPI results show that progress is not just about wealth and that it is possible to live happily in a sustainable way, without doing irretrievable damage to the environment and that this is measurable.
The ‘Better Life’ index
The OECD, a mainly rich country think tank has attempted to address this issue of developing an accurate indicator for development has created the ‘Better Life’ index. The index uses 24 variable indicators across 11 sectors, to create a measure of welfare for 34 of its members, plus Brazil and Russia. If the 11 sectors are grouped into two broader categories – America excels most in money and jobs, Switzerland in health and education.
The index was launched in May 2011; it was the first attempt to bring together internationally comparable measures of well being. The 11 sectors measured include housing, income, jobs, community life, education, environment, governance, work life balance. Each topic was considered using three indicators, for work life balance three indicators were considered, the number of employees working long hours, the percentage of working mothers, and the time people devoted to leisure and personal activities.
The Human Development Index
The HDI, Human Development Index, developed by the UNDP under the guidance of the late Dr. Mahbub ul Haque was an alternative measure. Dr. Haque said: “The human dimension of development is not just another addition to the development dialogue. It is an entirely new perspective, a revolutionary way to recast our conventional approach to development.”
In 1999 the Planning Commission of Bhutan organised a workshop in Thimpu to consider whether or not the concept of Gross National Happiness – GNH – as articulated by the King of Bhutan as a development target of his Kingdom, could be related to the HDI indicators of the UNDP. The workshop considered a number of issues: Could an index for GNH be constructed in the same way as the index for HDI? What are the main ingredients of happiness and what are the indicators for happiness? Were the four platforms of economic development, environmental preservation, cultural promotion and good governance through which Bhutan was pursuing GNH the appropriate ones?
In 2007 a British academic Adrian White published a league table of happiness which put Denmark in number one position. White took data from diverse sources as UNESCO, WHO and the CIA and obtained data from 80,000 people in 178 countries. He concluded that factors such as healthcare and education were significant when it came to a person’s happiness.
France has also jumped on this bandwagon of this ‘science of happiness’ movement, instead of confining oneself to only rupees and cents. In 2008 President Sarkozy appointed a Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, chaired by Nobel prize laureate Joseph Stiglitz consisting of 25 prominent social scientists, five with Nobel prizes in Economics including Stiglitz and Amartya Sen. The Commission presented its report on 14 September 2009, calling for the world, in the words of Stiglitz, to abandon its “GDP fetishism”.
The Commission dealt with the criticisms of GDP as a measure of wellbeing. GDP takes no account of depreciation of capital goods, although the value of production is based on market prices, not everything has a price, the value of these services, such as owner occupied housing and voluntary child care by parents is imputed by assumption.
Lord Layard in his book ‘Happiness: Lessons from a New Science’ says: “There is a paradox at the heart of our lives. Most people want more income and strive for it. Yet as Western societies have got richer, their people have become no happier.”
The Commission also examined the wellbeing of future generations. Our successors will inherit a stock of resources, machines, buildings and institutions, the quality of their lives will depend to a great extent on our behaviour and investments we make today, especially in their human capital, education and health and the environment. Will our legacy be obesity, diabetes, kidney disease and cancerous tumours?
Economic activity can be described as sustainable if future generations can expect to be at least as well off as us. The report concludes that finding any one measure which catches up all this seems too ambitious and that it is wiser to look at a wide range of indicators that is a basket of figures broadening official statistics beyond GDP alone.
A Gallup poll has found that Brazil was 12th happiest of 155 countries surveyed, one position happier than the USA. Four of the five happiest countries were in Scandinavia.
The surest way to ensure happiness and satisfaction is to minimise needs. Generally surveys have shown that when people have been asked to say how happy they were as compared to the past , the answers show that for the very poor, level of income really matters, when they self assess their level of happiness. But similar surveys have also shown that an enhanced income does not contribute to happiness, among segments of the population who have something over and above than the basic necessities of life.
The price of inequality
The Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, who Chaired former President Sarkozy’s Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and was also involved in the OECD Better Life Index, in a recent book entitled, ‘The Price of Inequality: How Today’s Divided Society Endangers our Future’ which he has written in response to the Occupy Wall Street Protesters.
Stiglitz says that the Occupy Wall Street protesters slogan of ‘We are the 99%’, echoes an article he wrote in 2011 in Vanity Fair entitled ‘Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%’ in May 2011. This inequality Stiglitz argues is the result of public policy being captured by an elite who have feathered their own nests at the expense of the rest of the community. They have abused their power to distort the political debate on these issues, pushing through tax cuts and concessions to favour the rich and adjusting monetary policy to favour the banks and financial houses. The challenge is how to measure these inequalities accurately so that there could be effective policy responses.
The Rio + 20 commitments to new environmentally friendly development benchmarks as an alternative to GDP, combined with the need to control human greed to conserve scarce resources, maybe a way forward. On the pursuit of happiness, George Bernard Shaw memorably expressed the view that “a lifetime of happiness! No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on earth!” Oscar Wilde opined that when it comes to happiness, there were two types of human beings: “Some cause happiness wherever they go, others whenever they go!” We may end up happier by chasing after wild geese! Is it a fools’ errand?
#srilanka's Col Karuna (exLTTE!) alleges TNA involved in war crimes & 2 b investigated! Translation from Sinhala press. TNA's complicity in Prabakaran's war crimes to be investigated
TwitLonger

. Minister Karuna Amman reveals all 

by Keerthi Warnakulasooriya

The government has decided to investigate TNA's complicity in war crimes committed by Prabakaran.

The Deputy Minister Vinayagamoorthy Karuna has revealed the relevant information concerning said crimes. He has revealed that the TNA received instructions from the political wing head of the Tigers, Thamilchelvan, when he met the TNA parliamentarians in Kilinochchi.

Moreover, Karuna has confirmed that the TNA MP Sritharan is a close relative of the former LTTE Jaffna commander, Theepan.

Meanwhile, the government has received information that the TNA parliamentary group, now in Switzerland, has demanded a war crime investigation against Sri Lanka.

The TNA group has also submitted a false report against Sri Lanka to the human rights council.


Source: 'Divaina' Sinhala newspaper | 08.03.2013
URL: http://www.divaina.com/2013/03/08/news06.html

ප්‍රභාගේ යුද අපරාධවලට
ටීඑන්ඒ දායකත්වය සොයයි

- නි. ඇමැති කරුණා පැටිකිරිය හෙළිකරයි

කීර්ති වර්ණකුලසූරිය


ප්‍රභාකරන් සිදු කළ යුද අපරාධ සම්බන්ධව ද්‍රවිඩ සන්ධානය දායක වීම සම්බන්ධව විමර්ශනයක්‌ කිරීමට රජය තීරණය කර ඇත.

මෙයට අදාළ තොරතුරු නියෝජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය විනයාගමූර්ති කරුණා විසින් හෙළි කර තිබේ. තමිල් සෙල්වන්ගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් ද්‍රවිඩ සන්ධාන මන්ත්‍රී කණ්‌ඩායම කිලිනොච්චියේදී රැස්‌වූ අවස්‌ථාවේ ද්‍රවිඩ සන්ධානයට උපදෙස්‌ ලැබුණු බව ද කරුණා විසින් තවදුරටත් අනාවරණය කර තිබේ.

එසේම ද්‍රවිඩ සන්ධාන මන්ත්‍රී ශ්‍රීධරන් යනු යාපනයේ කොටි හමුදා නායක තීපන්ගේ සමීපතම ඥතියා බවද කරුණා විසින් දන්වා ඇත.

මේ අතර ද්‍රවිඩ සන්ධාන මන්ත්‍රී කණ්‌ඩායම ස්‌විට්‌සර්ලන්තයට ගොස්‌ ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට එරෙහිව යුද අපරාධ විමර්ශනයක්‌ කළ යුතු යෑයි ජාත්‍යන්තර ප්‍රජාවගෙන් ඉල්ලීමේ සිද්ධිය ද රජයට වාර්තාවී ඇත.

මෙම ද්‍රවිඩ සංධාන කණ්‌ඩායම ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට එරෙහිව මානව හිමිකම් සමුළුව වෙත සාවද්‍ය වාර්තාවක්‌ ද ඉදිරිපත් කර තිබේ.

A Senior Lawyer Misleads The Supreme Court Regarding A Case Of Torture

Colombo TelegraphBy AHRC -March 12, 2013 
When the case regarding the torture of Chamila Bandara Jayaratne came before the Supreme Court yesterday (March 11) the lawyer appearing for the respondent police officers, Mr. Manohara de Silva, mislead the court by stating that leave to proceed had not been granted by the Supreme Court in this case. In fact, leave to proceed in this fundamental rights case was issued on September 18, 2003 by three judges of the Supreme Court, Fernando, J., Wigneswaran, J. and Weerasuriya, J. On that occasion the court ordered the respondents to file objections on or before November 10, 2003. After the respondents filed their objections the case was fixed for argument on August 5, 2004. On that day Mr. Manohara de Silva marked his appearance for the 1st to 4th respondents.
Chamila Bandara Jayaratne
Since then the case has been called before the Supreme Court on April 15, 2004, March 23, 2005, May 25, 2005, September 14, 2005, November 30, 2005, July 28, 2011, August 22, 2011 and September 14, 2011. On all these occasions Mr. de Silva appeared for the 1st to 4th respondents and Dr. Almeida Gunaratne PC with Lasitha Chaminda for the petitioner. Therefore, Mr. de Silva was fully aware that in this case leave to proceed had been granted and that the case had been called for argument on so many occasions. Therefore, when he told the court yesterday that leave to proceed had not been granted in this case he was, in fact, deliberately lying with the intention to mislead the court. The lawyer for the petitioner yesterday, Lasitha Chaminda, clearly pointed out to the court that the case had been fixed for argument. However, on the basis of Mr. de Silva’s submission the case was taken out of the list for argument and fixed as a calling case for ascertaining as to whether leave to proceed has been granted.
Thus, a case filed in 2003 is still pending before the courts with no fault at all on the part of the petitioner. The petitioner was the mother of Chamila Bandara Jayaratne who was a minor at the time he was seriously injured by several police officers belonging to the Ankumbara Police Station. Subsequent to a complaint of torture being filed on behalf of the young boy, the police filed several fabricated cases regarding robbery and theft against him. After many years of litigation Chamila Bandara was acquitted of all the charges and these acquittals go to prove the claim of the petitioner that he was arrested without any basis and that the statements obtained from him were done by way of severe torture.
On issuing the leave to proceed in this case the Supreme Court also ordered, among other things, that: ‘the National Police Commission (NPC) and the Human Rights Commission (HRCSL) are directed to forward to the registrar of the court, within two weeks from today, reports as to their investigations relating to the complaint made by the petitioner in this case’. Both the NPC and the HRCSL came to the conclusion after inquiry that, in fact, Chamila Bandara had been tortured by the police.
Mr. Manohara de Silva, who has appeared for several of the respondents, has also accused, in open court, the Asian Human Rights Commission for supporting the young victim in this case. He has tried to portray the idea that supporting a torture victim to seek justice before the Supreme Court is some sort of an anti-national activity done with ulterior motives. This kind of baseless allegations are made solely due to the irritation of this lawyer who has found that a torture victim from a poor family has been able to pursue his demand for justice despite of his humble background. It is sad to note that lawyers try to win cases by discouraging the opposing party from pursuing their claims. The adversarial system has been so misused for lawyers who want the opposing party not to contest them so as to gain an easy victory.
Lying to the court is perjury. In fact, the contempt of court process has a meaning only when used against this kind of practice which undermines the process of justice. Unfortunately in recent cases contempt of court is used only for political purposes.

Commonwealth Day should be a day for celebration - Alexander

Douglas Alexander

The Labour Party

Commenting on the situation in Sri Lanka ahead of Commonwealth Day 2013, Labour’s Shadow Foreign Secretary, Douglas Alexander MP said:

 
“Commonwealth Day should be a day for celebration of the role of the Commonwealth in promoting human rights globally.
 
“But with the next Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting due to take place in Sri Lanka in November, it should also be a day for action by the Sri Lankan government: action that acknowledges the appalling human rights abuses which have taken place there over recent years.
 
“The Commonwealth must use the prospect of the meeting in Colombo to encourage the Sri Lankan government to now meet its clear international obligations, and begin rapid change to acknowledge the human rights abuses which took place during its bloody armed conflict.
 
“The British government must urgently raise with the Sri Lankan government the need for a full, independent, international investigation into the allegations of war crimes committed by all parties. 

"And the British Government should keep its attendance at this summit under review as it awaits effective action from the Sri Lankan Government.”

Lifesaver of Sri Lankan descent 'racially vilified' by Bondi surf club


Tuesday, 12 March 2013 
A SURF lifesaver of Sri Lankan descent has taken action in the Federal court against the Bondi Surf Bathers Life Saving Club claiming the iconic Sydney beach institution racially vilified him.

Indika Roshan Ratnayake told the court in Sydney he had been the subject of "racial vilification, bullying, and vicarious liability" in his years as a member of the club.
The lawyer representing the Bondi club, Mr Stephen McKenzie, raised the possibility of a cross claim against Mr Ratnayake, over "a website that he authors containing what we will say is defamatory and racist material" against some members of the club.
Mr Ratnayake said he did not have sufficient financial resources to hire a lawyer and was instead representing himself.
The presiding judge, Justice Griffiths, gave the parties four weeks to prepare documentation, including statements as to why the case should proceed or not in view of the apparent fact that it was outside the time limit for such applications.
Mr Ratnayake will also be required to produce points of claim against the club.
Outside the court, Mr Ratnayake said he had been barred, he claimed, unlike other members of the club, from gaining access to surf equipment that would enable him to improve his lifesaving skills, and claimed he had been victim of a "racial slur".
Mr McKenzie declined to answer Mr Ratnayake's allegations outside the court, saying that the case against the club had yet to be clearly made by Mr Ratnayake.
The Bondi surf club's deputy president, Jacob Waks, said the club had called an urgent board meeting to discuss the matter on Tuesday tonight.
Mr Waks said many directors had only found out about the court case at the weekend, and declined to comment further ahead of the board meeting.
Courtesy - The Australian

Attacks on Places of Religious Worship in Post–War Sri Lanka

Centre for Policy Alternatives
8th March 2013, Colombo, Sri Lanka: While the post-war context offered an opportunity for consolidating peace and reconciliation, and there have been a number of positive developments, there are increasing concerns relating to violence targeting places of worship and religious intolerance. Since the end of the war there have been high-profile incidents such as the attack on the Mosque in Dambulla in April 2012, however other incidents, have received little or no public and media attention. This has resulted in a limited understanding of the scale and nature of these incidents.
This report documents incidents of attacks on places of worship in Sri Lanka since the end of the war in May 2009 and discusses the broader context of such attacks. The report lists 65 cases of attacks on religious places of worship between May 2009 and January 2013. Direct attacks have been reported from all provinces of Sri Lanka, making clear that the threat is not restricted to particular areas. Most of the reported incidents were from the Western province (16), followed by the Eastern province (12), the Southern province (11) and the North-Western province (9).
Although the list cannot claim to be comprehensive, it offers a starting point to document attacks against places of worship of the four main religions practiced in the country. The lack of coverage by the media and other civil society groups, lack of consistent documentation by religious groups, and the cautiousness of religious and civil society groups to engage on this issue were key obstacles in the compiling of this list. This report attempts to address this information gap so as to provide a more comprehensive picture of the ground situation and thereby raise public awareness and increase the understanding of policy makers on this issue.
While the numbers do provide some sense of the scale of the violence, it is important to make distinctions in terms of the nature of violence in each of these incidents. The majority of these cases are against Christian places of worship, mostly against non-traditional churches and there are also a number of attacks on Muslim places of worship. The 65 attacks can be categorized into three main types: inter-communal attacks, intra-religious violence, and robbery.
In terms of inter-communal attacks the bulk of incidents where perpetrators have been identified, are instances of Sinhala Buddhist attacks on other religious communities’ places of worship. While in the majority of incidents the perpetrators have not been prosecuted and in a number of cases are unidentified, in others there are allegations against groups and individuals who are believed to be responsible. A significant proportion of the attacks incidents relating to Buddhist and Hindu religious places are cases of theft and vandalism. There have also been several incidents of intra-religious violence between denominations of all the religious communities apart from the Hindu community.
While a number of the incidents appear to be isolated, in a number of cases it is evident that the attacks on an individual religious place is sometimes preceded by other forms of violence, threats and intimidation against a religious community in a specific area. The report attempts to include some of these incidents, including violence against clergy, protests against religious practices and hate speech, in order to provide a context to the attacks. The continuing acts of violence against places of religious worship coupled with a culture of intolerance are threatening to undermine efforts to consolidate peace, emphasising the need for immediate action by all actors, especially the Government.
Download the full report from here. You can also read it online here.

 "We do not want compensation, give back our lands”. “There is no negative opinion about it" was the pleas made by the Waligamam north people, civil movements and politicians.
 
This statement was given when queried about the government’s advancing activities in making arrangements to compensate by confiscating the 24 grama sevaka units coming under the Waligamam north.
 
Waligamam north peoples resettlement committee Leader Gunabalasingam said, this activity of government cannot be accepted by us. We do not require compensation. We need our lands to return back.
 
“We are fishermen”. “We can live only in coastal line areas”.  “From Thondamanaru to Keerimalai, 12 kilo meters long coastal line is under the control of military”. “Why these lands are required to them”?
 
“We do not need the state compensation. We need our native soil” was said, by National Fishermen Coordination movement Coordinator A.Yesudasan.
 
 “People’s lands should be released to people. If people desire only, could take their lands and could compensate them. But forcing people should not occur. You are to provide security only for people.  Instead, people’s life should not be made a question mark?
 
Democratic People’s Front Leader Mano Ganeshan said, Sri Lanka government’s realities have now got exposed.
 
The Learnt Lessons and Reconciliation Commission was appointed by the government, and the recommendation made by the Commission was not implemented.
 
 Sri Lanka government is still maintaining a self-centered attitude. Hence India and international which assisted Sri Lanka, should control Sri Lanka from its attitude was said by him.
Tuesday , 12 March 2013
Forces are  checking and registrations are occurred in the early morning hours in many areas in Kilinochchi, hence people are facing immense difficulties was related with fear  by the public.
 
People traveling from Kilinochchi A9 road, Kanagapuram road, Paranthan Poonakari road, A35 road were intercepted and checking activities occurred from early morning hours 4.30 a.m until 6.00 a.m.
 
The travelers details are recorded, hence those travelling in the early morning hours to attend to their urgent requirements are facing inconvenience and are in panic was said.
 
Forces by intercepting the road closer to Paranthan Mullaitheevu A35 road closer to Sivapuram Kudiyiruppu on Monday early morning hours and were engaged in registration activities.
 
A youth riding on a motorbike to attend to an urgent matter was stopped at about 4.55 a.m and the forces have requested his driving license and national identity card.
 
The said youth had submitted his license and has requested that he had to leave immediately to attend to an urgent matter, but he was detained for 20 minutes by the forces, and after making the relevant registration released him, was said.
 
Forces processing the registration, should not function without affecting those rushing for urgent requirements, was said by the people.
 
 Many travel in the early morning hours to attend to their daily routines are in fear due to this checking activities of the forces. 
Tuesday , 12 March 2013


CJ Shirani Has Been Summoned To Appear Before Bribery Commission

By Colombo Telegraph -March 12, 2013
Colombo Telegraph“The Lawyers Collective learns that Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake has been summoned to appear before the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (Bribery Commission), on 18th March 2013.” says the Lawyers Collective.
CJ Shirani
Issuing a statement the Lawyers Collective says; “Under the prevailing situation where politicization of all public institutions at all levels is prevalent, we are of the considered view that the government has started its much practiced witch hunts of those who do not submit to the dictates of the government. The intolerance of dissent and not leaving any space for diversity is the trade mark of those in power. The loss of confidence of the legal fraternity and the public on public institutions is therefore justified. In that context, we are of the view that the government has started its persecution of CJ Shirani Bandaranayake for her courageous stand to challenge the Impeachment.”
The lawyers at the recently concluded Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) elections have clearly shown their disapproval of the government’s intimidation of the judiciary and the need to protect the Rule of L aw and the independence of the judiciary. We call upon the government to stop post impeachment intimidation of Chief Justice Bandaranayake and the legal fraternity.
“We also urge the Government and all its institutions to respect the right of the citizens of the country to dissent and to enjoy the fundamental rights enshrined in the constitution before it reaches dangerous proportions.” they further say.
Protest against US resolution held in Killinochc​hie
[ Tuesday, 12 March 2013, 03:16.20 PM GMT +05:30 ]
Protest against the US resolution in Geneva stage at the Killinochchie depot this morning.
Youths of the civil defence force who were joined to the Army to fulfill the government policy were also present in this protest.
Special bus services provided to youths arrive from Mullaitivu and Killinochchie districts. These youths together with SLFP Killinochchie district parliamentarian Geethanjalai stage protest against the US resolution in the Killinochchie depot today.
Protest commenced at 10.00 am this morning infront of the Killinochchie central college and marched up to the depot junction by the A9 road.
During the time of protest SLFP MP Geethajali raised slogans such as “Stop Imperialism activities against SriLanka”, “ Do not intervene in to internal issues of SriLanka” “Mahinda Rajapaksa is our only leader” and also “ No one can Mahinda regime”.
Spekind the protest rehabilitated LTTE cared and the present member of Civil Defence Force said at present I have completed my rehabilitation programme and leading peaceful life in this country.
However majority of youths said we all are forced to take part in these protests. We have joined the civil defence force to full fill the need of our daily bread , they said.

Protest in Colombo of Families of the Disappeared

Tuesday, 12 March 2013
The Families of the Disappeared, a joint organisation led by Brito had organized a protest in Colombo on the 06th of March. Political leaders were too invited to participate in this event to be held opposite Colombo Municipality near Viharamahadevi Park. The large convoy of family members of the disappeared, nearly 1000, which traveled from the North were stopped by the military in Vauniya, and were not allowed to proceed to Colombo. Hence the military rulers of the Tamil homeland stopped them taking part in the scheduled protest. Plan was to hold a public meeting and submit a petition to the United Nations office in Colombo. These Tamil family members of the disappeared were traveling in 11 buses, all of which were stopped in Vauniya 5th night.
“They were told it’s not safe for them to travel further. If they continue to do so, there are people who will be pelting stones at them. And, the military will not be able to do anything” Brito Fernando the President of the ‘Families of the Disappeared’ and the co-convener of the ‘Platform for Freedom’ said. However as requested, Vickramabahu, Mano, Asath ,Jayalath, and several other political leaders , social activists, Christian priests, a few mothers and fathers gathered opposite the Viharamahadevi Park in Colombo. The organizers had initially planned to have a Satyagraha in front of the Park, then march to the Public Library for a public meeting, and then proceed to the United Nations office in Colombo to hand over their petition. But, after the people were stopped in Vauniya, a brief event was held in front of the Viharamahadevi Park in Colombo. “Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission states “Ensure people, community leaders and religious leaders have the freedom to organize peaceful events and meetings without restrictions“. But, Tamil people were blocked in Vauniya, and were not allowed to travel further. This is not true reconciliation” observed Fr. M. Sakthivel, who participated.
Dr Vickramabahu of Nava Sama Samaja party speaking at the gathering said “this military action shows that the people in the Tamil homeland are living under a military rule and differentially treated. The police was helpless. It is the military that organizes stone throwing. We had experienced that at Mulative. LLRC recommendations are not implemented. This event exposed the true nature of the situation. Mahinda was responsible for the break down of peace agreement that was established by Ranil. Mahinda went to courts to get a bogus ruling negating tsunami agreement with the Tamil Tigers. If the peace project was continued a settlement was inevitable. But Mahinda blasted that opportunity and launched this genocidal war. We are suffering due to this disaster created. Even after the cruel war which killed so many there is no reconciliation. Brutal repression continues. Entire country is under a dictatorship. Situation in the north is drifting into the south as well. In order to curb the unrest and protest against the government in the south, a Muslim hunt has been organised by the government. Pogrom against the Muslims will be used by the government to suppress democratic rights of all.”
Despite untold hardships, Tamil mothers continue their endless journey in search of their loved ones. One such mother is a tearful Ashadevi Shanmugalingam. She pleaded to the priests and politicians gathered there to find her son alive. “I want my son. Please help me to find him alive. My son is innocent, and I am helpless” lamented Ashadevi Shanmugalingam, while holding her son’s black and white portrait close to her heart. Her tearful plea, emotionally led the clergymen and politician to embrace her, and wipe her tears.
“Rights of the Tamil people are not yet respected by the Government of Sri Lanka. Thousands of innocent civilians were brutally killed during the war, many have been made to disappear and numerous Tamil men and women are detained without trial. Tamil people’s rights are being violated continuously in post war Sri Lanka,” said Mano Ganesan, leader of the Democratic People’s Front.
A Tamil mother of a missing son had traveled from Jaffna throughout the night in order to be at the scheduled protest in Colombo today. She had dropped off her luggage at a lodge in Pettah, and quickly came to the venue. “We came on a bicycle to Jaffna town on the 26th of April 2008, at 4pm. My son went to a nearby shop. 8 men in military uniform with beards and on field motorbikes took my son away. I have complained to the authorities, but nothing has brought my son home,” said Perinparani Thirunavukarasu from Jaffna.
The organizers expected hundreds of family members to gather in Colombo to protest against disappearances, and raise their voices for accountability and justice. However the protest couldn’t take place as expected due to the failure to adhere to Recommendation 9.118 which states “Ensure people, community leaders and religious leaders have the freedom to organize peaceful events and meetings without restrictions”.
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First time on TV: No Fire Zone - The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka

Headlines Today | March 12, 2013
You can watch this documentary on Sri Lankan war crimes by acclaimed filmmaker Callum Macrae at 9 pm tonight on Headlines Today.