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, March 13, 2013


Lanka likely to seek a vote on US resolution

Geneva HR parley:

 

by Shamindra Ferdinando

 Having refused to negotiate with the US on the text of the forthcoming second US resolution targeting Sri Lanka before the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva, the government is now faced with the possibility of asking for a vote on the resolution in spite of certain defeat.

The UNHRC is divided into five regions, comprising 47 countries.

Well informed sources said that the failure to go for a vote meant the adoption of the US resolution without a division. That would be inimical to national interests, sources said, adding that even though the result was certain to be worse than the defeat last year, the government would have no option but to seek a vote.

As Sri Lanka is not among members of the UNHRC, it will have to request a friendly country to call for a vote. Russia, China and Cuba are no longer members of the UNHRC, though Pakistan remains a constituent.

The first US resolution, co-sponsored by 40 countries, was passed by 24 votes to 15 against with right abstentions on March 22, 2012. On the instructions from the government, Ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha on Friday told the US Ambassador for Human Rights, Eileen Donahoe of Sri Lanka’s position.

Sources said that those pushing for international war crimes investigation would definitely welcome the passage of the resolution, without a vote. Some members of the UNHRC would want to avoid voting, sources said. India and Japan would be among the countries wanting to evade a vote on the second US resolution.

India voted against Sri Lanka at the first vote, whereas Japan wasn’t a member of the UNHRC at that time. However, Japan is now a member of the UNHRC grouped under Asian states comprising 13 countries (India, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Maldives, Pakistan, the Philippines, Qatar, South Korea, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates).

Interestingly, President Mahinda Rajapaksa is on a four-day official visit to Japan ahead of the vote.

Sources pointed out that Japan took a sensible stand at the 19th sessions when the US moved its first resolution against Sri Lanka.

Minister Sakashita Osamu of the Japanese Permanent Mission in Geneva told the 19th session of the UNHRC: "No country has a perfect record on human rights, and countries need to be given time, space, encouragement, advice, and where appropriate, concrete assistance in order to overcome existing challenges. The political, socio-economic and cultural context of each country duly needs to be considered when addressing human rights issues.

"Too often, a false dichotomy is constructed between the universality of human rights per se and the particularity of specific human rights situations. Discussions, including those by this council, need to combine the two essential facets of human rights issues in a constructive manner."

Don’t protest in Geneva – Foreign Ministry tells Sri Lankans in Europe

TUESDAY, 12 MARCH 2013
logoA protest campaign to be held opposite UNHRC office in Geneva on Friday (15th) at 10.00 a.m. has been cancelled on a request by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Sri Lanka says its organizers.
The protest campaign against the resolution brought against Sri Lanka was to be held with the participation of Sri Lankans living in European countries.


The Venue Must Be Changed If The Commonwealth Is To Retain Its Well-Earned Reputation

Colombo Telegraph
By James Manor -March 13, 2013
Prof James Manor
India will soon be blamed — unjustly — for an international catastrophe. Since 1991, the Commonwealth has been a potent force behind the scenes for democracy, rights and human dignity. For example, it has persuaded the leaders of several one-party states to adopt open multi-party systems and it has ensured that leaders who have lost elections do not cling onto power. This admirable record is about to be squandered.
The next Commonwealth heads of government meeting in November is scheduled for Sri Lanka where an abusive government has committed multiple outrages. If that meeting is not moved elsewhere, the Commonwealth will abandon its enlightened commitments. Its irresolute secretary general,Kamalesh Sharma, has blocked a change of venue. Because he is a former Indian diplomat, New Delhi will be blamed.
This is already beginning to happen. Some commentators are saying that India urged Sharma to avoid offending Sri Lanka’s leaders because it is anxious about China’s growing influence there. It is true that China has invested massively in the island and that in 2011, President Mahinda Rajapaksa made a threatening telephone call to a newspaper editor in an unsuccessful attempt to suppress a report that the Chinese had given him $9 million to be used at his discretion. But India has not tried to restrain the secretary general.
Senior figures in the foreign policy establishment in New Delhi and in Commonwealth circles in London plainly state that India’s leaders are exasperated with Sri Lanka’s leaders and their brutish actions. India has privately urged the Commonwealth to take a tough line. The timid secretary general has rejected that advice.
New Delhi is especially unhappy about a decision last month by Rajapaksa to break an assurance to Indian leaders to transfer significant powers to elected regional councils, to give the island’s Tamil minority some autonomy. Instead, he announced that power would be radically centralised. After that snub to India, when Rajapaksa visited Bodh Gaya and Tirupati last month, no Central government minister met him.
Indian leaders are also well aware of the brutal approach to Tamil non-combatants in the final phase of the civil war in 2009. An investigation by a panel appointed by the UN secretary general described the actions of Sri Lanka’s army as “appalling”. More recently, an Indian TV channel aired telling evidence from Britain’s Channel Four that the 12-year-old son of LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran was shot dead at close range while in the custody of the Sri Lankan army.
The Commonwealth secretary general has meekly expressed hope that the behaviour of the island’s leaders will improve, but their actions since the civil war ended have continued to cause grave concern. In response, US President Barack Obama‘s assistant secretary of state has warned them to take note of the warrants issued by the International Criminal Court against Muammar Gaddafi‘s son for flouting international humanitarian law.
Recently, the chief justice of Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court was impeached after rulings that were inconvenient to the executive. This violated Commonwealth commitments to judicial independence. When the International Bar Association protested and tried to send the former chief justice of India, J.S. Verma, to Colombo for discussions, he was denied a visa.
Shadowy groups of armed men continue to abduct, wound and murder opponents of the government. Journalists have frequently been targets. The Sri Lankan ruling party’s chief whip told parliament in 2009 that “nine journalists have been killed since 2006, some 27 attacked while five were reported abducted”. In 2010, a government minister who had once physically attacked a BBC correspondent said at a public function that “journalists should not write in ways which would ultimately force them to be hanged”. Two weeks ago, gunmen burst into the home of a Colombo journalist who had criticised the government and shot him several times, leaving him for dead.
The president of the Commonwealth Journalists Association has stated that “any government that subjects its independent news media to such violent and arbitrary actions has no right to call itself democratic. Sri Lanka doesn’t even come close to adhering to the basic principles of the Commonwealth”. But it is not only scribes who have suffered. The secretary of the island’s Judicial Services Commission was stabbed after alleging that the government was seeking to destroy judicial independence.
Concerns expressed by many international agencies have been dismissed by Sri Lanka’s leaders as a concerted effort to spread falsehoods. But this is difficult to believe when we see how many respected institutions are supposedly involved: the Red Cross, the UN, the European Union, the US state department, the US Senate, the Australian and British parliaments, the Commonwealth Journalists Association, BBC World Service, the International Bar Association, the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and several other human rights organisations.
To understand the mentality of the island’s leaders, consider the statements made by Sri Lanka’s defence secretory, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa (the president’s brother) in July 2012 on the telephone to a journalist from the Sunday Leader, an independent newspaper. When the journalist asked if the secretory had threatened her, he replied “Yes I threatened you. Your type of journalists are pigs who eat sh*t… You are a sh*t sh*t journalist. A f***ing sh*t… I will put you in jail… People will kill you…” There was much more of this. Foul words were used 22 times in two telephone conversations.
One further, hair-raising prospect should be noted. If the Commonwealth holds its heads of government meeting in Sri Lanka, the island’s leaders will coordinate the work of Commonwealth agencies for the next two years — including those that concern themselves with human rights and democracy.
The venue must be changed if the Commonwealth is to retain its well-earned reputation as a force for human decency. If it is not changed, the responsibility will lie with the secretary general and not India’s government, even though he is an Indian.
Read the Sinhala translation here.  Translation by Yahapalanaya Lanka.
The writer is professor emeritus of Commonwealth Studies, University of London, UK. This article is  first published in The Indian Express under the title ‘A message to Colombo’.

Sauce for the goose but not for the gander

- By Dr. Vickramabahu Karunaratne-WEDNESDAY, 13 MARCH 2013

The Families of the Disappeared, a joint organisation led by Brito had organised a protest in Colombo on March 6. Political leaders too were invited to participate in this event to be held opposite the Colombo Municipality near Viharamahadevi Park. The large convoy of family members of the disappeared, nearly 1000, which travelled from the North were stopped by the military in Vavuniya, and not allowed to proceed to Colombo. Hence the military rulers of the Tamil homeland stopped them taking part in the scheduled protest. The plan of the organisers 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 Vavuniya on the night of March 5.

" The LLRC states “Ensure people, community leaders and religious leaders have the freedom to organise peaceful events and meetings without restrictions“.  But, Tamil people were blocked in Vavuniya, and not allowed to travel further "

Apparently they were told it was not safe for them to travel further. If they continued to do so, there were people who would be pelting stones at them. And, the military would not be able to do anything.

I thought the army was there to keep law and order and arrest those who threw stones at people travelling! No, they were there to defend the right of pelting stones. However as requested, I participated at the event in Colombo. Mano, Asath, Jayalath, and several other political leaders, social activists, Christian priests, a few mothers and fathers were gathered opposite the Viharamahadevi Park in Colombo. The organisers 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 Vavuniya, this brief event was held opposite the Viharamahadevi Park in Colombo.

“The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission states ‘Ensure people, community leaders and religious leaders have the freedom to organise peaceful events and meetings without restrictions.’  But, Tamil people were blocked in Vavuniya, and not allowed to travel further. This is not true reconciliation,” observed Fr. M. Sakthivel, who participated.

" Two decades ago we marched with Mahinda, searching for redress to Sinhala mothers who were looking for their missing children "

I explained to the gathering that this military action showed clearly that the people in the Tamil homeland were living under a military rule and deferentially treated. The police were helpless. It was the military that organised stone-throwing. We had experienced that at Mullaitivu too. The LLRC recommendations were not being implemented. This event exposed the true nature of the situation. In the past, during the peace discussions Mahinda was responsible for the break down of the peace agreement that was established by Ranil. Mahinda went to courts to get a bogus ruling negating the tsunami agreement with the Tamil Tigers. If the peace project was continued, a settlement was inevitable. But Mahinda blasted that opportunity and launched this war. We are now suffering due to this disaster created. Even after the cruel war which killed so many there is no reconciliation. Brutal repression continues. Not only the north but the entire country is coming under a dictatorship. With economic crisis the situation in the north is drifting into the south as well. To curb the unrest and protest against the government in the south, a Muslim hunt has been organised recently by the government. Action against the Muslims and the resultant unrest would be used by the government to suppress democratic rights of all.

" To curb the unrest and protest against the government in the south, a Muslim hunt has been organised recently by the government. Action against the Muslims and the resultant unrest would be used by the government to suppress democratic rights of all "

 “Rights of the Tamil people are not yet respected by the Government of Sri Lanka. Tamil people’s rights are being violated continually in post-war Sri Lanka,” said Mano Ganesan, leader of the Democratic People’s Front.

How can the government speak of reconciliation when the right of a mother to look for the missing son is suppressed?  Two decades ago we marched with Mahinda, searching for redress to Sinhala mothers who were looking for their missing children. But today a Tamil mother of a missing son cannot travel from Jaffna to Colombo to be at the scheduled protest in Colombo!

Remembering Karl Marx, Asiatic Despotism And Sri Lanka

By Laksiri Fernando -March 13, 2013 
Dr Laksiri Fernando
Colombo TelegraphHe had been left alone for scarcely two minutes, and when we came back we found him in his armchair, peacefully gone to sleep, but for ever.”  – Frederick Engels
This happened on 14 March 1883, at quarter to three in the afternoon, hundred and thirty years ago. Since then so many things have happened and so many other things have changed in the world but many of his ideas are still valid or relevant. Karl Marx undoubtedly is a great thinker of all times. He is the founder of ‘scientific socialism’ along with Frederick Engels and wrote the Communist Manifesto in 1848 which summed up their thinking in programmatic form even before Marx ventured into write Das Capital as an analysis of the ‘laws of motion’ in the capitalist economy. Among his many theories and discoveries was his analysis of the Asiatic mode of production (AMP) – the base of Asiatic despotism – which is the main focus of this article in celebrating Marx this year considering its relevance in understanding even the present day Sri Lanka.
General Contribution
A standard text to understand Marxism as a beginning perhaps still is V. I. Lenin’s The Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism written in March 1913, in commemorating Marx’s thirtieth death anniversary. That is exactly hundred years ago. That is how I began to learn and understand Marxism. The three sources that Lenin talked about were ‘German philosophy,’ ‘English political economy’ and ‘French socialism.’ He added that “those were the best that man produced in the nineteenth century.” The three components that he talked about were ‘dialectical materialism,’ ‘Marxist political economy’ and ‘scientific socialism.’
That is about Marxism. But in assessing the contribution of Marx as a person or thinker, I would rather depend on what Engels said at Marx’s graveside on 17 March 1883. It was brief but succinct. He said, “Just as Darwin discovered the law of development of organic nature, so Marx discovered the law of development of human history.” We all know that Darwin’s theories are disputed as Marx’s are. But their profound impact and the validity of key propositions are almost undisputed.
Engels highlighted two discoveries of Marx in interpreting human history and society. When he was referring to the ‘laws of development of human history’ he was not merely referring to class struggle. In simple terms he said “mankind must first of all eat, drink, and have shelter and clothing, before it can pursue politics, science, art and religion.” It may sound like the Buddha who asked his disciples to ‘feed the people before preaching’ but the sociological conclusion of Marx was the most important as follows.
“The production of the immediate material means, and consequently the degree of economic development attained by a given people or during a given epoch, form the foundation upon which the state institutions, the legal conceptions, art, and even the ideas on religion, of the people concerned have been evolved.”
Most importantly, therefore, Marx concluded that the state institutions, legal conceptions, art or even the ideas on religion should be explained on the basis of the production of the immediate material needs, and the degree of economic development attained, “instead of vice versa, as had hitherto been the case.” This however did not disregard the importance of ideas or science in history. As Engels said, “Science was for Marx a historically dynamic, revolutionary force.”
“But that is not all,” Engels further reiterated at his graveside. “Marx also discovered the special law of motion governing the present-day capitalist mode of production, and the bourgeois society that this mode of production has created.” That is the discovery of surplus value. This discovery, Engels said “suddenly threw light on the problem” in understanding both the rise and expansion and the possible demise of the capitalist system “which all previous investigations, of both bourgeois economists and socialist critics, had been groping in the dark.”
The above two ‘discoveries’ undoubtedly have profound application in understanding the present day Sri Lankaif they are not applied artificially or superficially. There are, for example, salient connections between the (weak) nature of the ‘owners of the means of production’ and their overdependence on the State for capital accumulation and even the State’s move towards more and more authoritarianism. It is not the strength but the weakness of the capitalist system. This is abundantly apparent particularly in comparison to India. This is only one example of the possible application. But some of the other political phenomena might not be explained solely by Marx’s general theories but by his specific theory of the AMP.
Asiatic Mode of Production
There are those who tried to confine Marx’s analysis of AMP to his early years only. That is not correct. In his Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy Marx said “In broad outline, the Asiatic, ancient, feudal and modern bourgeois modes of production may be designated as epochs marking progress in the economic development of society.” This was in January 1859. Although in a footnote to the Communist Manifesto in 1888 Engels explained the existence of what could be called ‘primitive communist’ societies but he never suggested dropping the idea of Asiatic mode of production. That distortion came from Moscow for obvious reasons in the 1930s. The obvious reason was the congruence between the AMP and the Stalinist rule.
The analysis of AMP came in early writings and repeated in the three volumes of Das Capital as a comparison to other modes of production. The chapter on ‘pre-capitalist economic formations’ in much celebrated theoretical work of Grundrisse (1857-58) analysed it more clearly. Nevertheless, it may be true that the analysis of the AMP remained clouded with some uncertainties due particularly to the lack of empirical research. Lenin often equated the Tsarist Russia to Asiatic despotism and Leon Trotsky alluded it in interpreting class alliances in colonial societies. It was however the former Marxist, Karl Wittfogel, who resurrected the theory in his famous Oriental Despotism (1957).
Marx’s Reference to Ceylon
As far as I am aware, there is one reference to Ceylon in Marx’s writings and interestingly it is in the context of AMP. That is quite important and revealing. It is not only in respect of geography but also in social formation. He considered India and Ceylon as one single ecosphere. This is what he said.
“Hindostan is an Italy of Asiatic dimensions, the Himalayas for the Alps, the Plains of Bengal for the Plains of Lombardy, the Deccan for the Apennines, and the Isle of Ceylon for the Island of Sicily.”    
For those who know about the history of Sicily, the comparison of Ceylon to Sicily is interesting apart from the present Mafia! Marx was writing to the New York Tribune in 1853 to be precise. He criticised the British colonialism in its despotic ruling both in India and Ceylon. It is more invasive than the Asiatic despotism and here he used the term ‘Asiatic despotism.’ Then he explained what was there before.
“There have been in Asia, generally, from immemorial times, but three departments of Government; that of Finance, or the plunder of the interior; that of War, or the plunder of the exterior; and, finally, the department of Public Works.”
As Marx was writing to the general reader, he used the term ‘government’ but it could also read as the State. The three departments that he talked about are like references specifically to Sri Lanka today. For example, one handling the Finance or the ‘plunder of the interior,’ another handing the War or the ‘plunder of the exterior’ beyond its own ethnic group and the third handling Public Works, including of course ‘Divineguma.’ Whatever there in addition is merely cosmetic. How prophetic Marx was!
To come back to the more serious points of the ancient AMP, his letters with Engels during the period reveal that Engels was the person who highlighted the ‘climatic conditions’ and the need for artificial irrigation – impressive tanks and canals – that underpinned the public works in ancient AMP. The communities that were scattered in small and isolated villages completely depended on the State or those who wielded power.
Bases of AMP
There were two major facets that Marx emphasised as the bases of the AMP. First is the necessity of the people to develop a kind of ‘voluntary associations’ or self-help social relations at the village level to survive and sustain their living. Some even identified these villages as ‘communistic.’ I have maintained the view that Thomas More possibly drew inspirations for his Utopia (1516) from village life in Ceylon and Kerala (Calicut).
Second is the necessity of a “centralizing government” interfacing this village means of production for essentially irrigation purposes. There was also a strong element of manpower control. This is the Asiatic despotism. I am not alluding but quoting: “Hence an economical function devolved upon all Asiatic Governments, the function of providing public works.”       
Then he criticised the colonial administration by saying “Now, the British in East India accepted from their predecessors the department of finance and of war, but they have neglected entirely that of public works.” This was the disaster of that particular colonialism and misery of the people. He also maintained the view that the British principles of not only laissez-faire but also laissez-aller might not apply or work in these conditions.Laissez-aller here means the ‘freedom of movement.’ Then what would be the alternative? He didn’t say directly.
But he supplied an unmistakable critique of Oriental despotism and said:
“We must not forget that these idyllic village-communities, inoffensive though they may appear, had always been the solid foundation of Oriental despotism, that they restrained the human mind within the smallest possible compass, making it the unresisting tool of superstition, enslaving it beneath traditional rules, depriving it of all grandeur and historical energies.”
The reincarnation of ‘Oriental despotism’ is still possible and occurs as we have experienced in Sri Lanka under several different regimes based on ‘public works’ and keeping the mass of rural populous dependent on the State through various devices. This is also the secret behind the Rajapaksa hegemony. As Marx said, the political character of this despotism is the “restraining of the human mind within the smallest possible compass, making it the unresisting tool of superstition, enslaving it beneath traditional rules, depriving it of all grandeur and historical energies.” At least this is the attempt.
Marx criticised the British colonialism by saying that it “was actuated only by the vilest interests, and was stupid in her manner of enforcing them.” It may be considered too much of a mild criticism however. It was left for Lenin to analyse the true nature of Imperialism and announce the possibility of political and social change. But Marx asked the right question: “Can mankind fulfil its destiny without a fundamental revolution in the social state of Asia?” Although this was raised in respect of AMP of that time it is still valid in respect of AMP of our time. It was also Marx who said that “Philosophers have only interpreted the world in different ways. The point is, however, to change it.”
Conclusion
When we consider the application of Marx’s AMP to Sri Lanka’s social evolution along with his general theory of political economy, the country has gone through (a) indigenous living of ‘Yakkas’ and ‘Nagas’ (b) long periods of fluctuating AMP with Asiatic despotism (c) colonial plunder and introduction of capitalism and (d) post-colonial bourgeoisie development mixed with the resurrection of AMP and Asiatic despotism again and again. What may be absent in understanding the past and the present might be the decisive role that the Asiatic despotism played in differentiating the ethnic formations and its relation to AMP. Marxism has always been weak in analysing the ethnic question.
In the resurrection of Asiatic despotism in contemporary Sri Lanka, it is not by accident that ‘Mahinda Chinthana’ quoted Parakramabahu the Great in its preamble declaring that “A ruler is only a trustee and not the owner of land or its vegetation” in a benevolent tone. It is an ideology or a mind-set. J. R. Jayewardene had a similar vision. Marx extensively quoted J. B. Tavernier’s Voyages (1679) in his letters to Engels in early 1850s to explicate this aspect of governance or rule to strive his point of AMP. As Tavernier said the Mogul Emperor also was ‘not the landowner but the trustee of the land and territory.’ But he could plunder.
More precisely, the current thinking of overall centralized power on the one hand and the resurrection of village administration on the other, is akin to AMP at the base and the Asiatic or Oriental despotism at the top, that Marx talked about. It should not be mistaken, however, that the primary nature of the ‘mode of production’ in Sri Lanka today is capitalist or semi-capitalist. However, the over dependence of the agricultural communities on the State and the poor sections of the populous on the government hand-outs (i.e. Samurdhi) have created a situation where Despotic rule has been possible behind the democratic paraphernalia.

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. 

Rehabilitated’ LTTE members forced to participate in anti UN protests in the North

TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 2013

SRI LANKA BRIEFimagePart of the pretest ( photo CDN)Reports received by GTN says that the forces were forcibly collecting people from Mullaitheevu and Kilinochchi localities to participate in anti UN  protests. One such protest was held on 11th March in Kilinichchi, Vanni district.
The forcibly recruited former rebels - males and females of  the civil defense forces and the pedestrians were  compelled to participate this  protest which was organized by the ruling party.

Previously arrangements were made to hold the protest   in Kilinochci and Mullaitheevu region, however due to the reason of not able to collect manpower, all were transported in buses to Kilinochchi and were directed to take part in the demonstration.

Mainly males and females assigned to the civil defense forces were in large numbers congregated at the Kilinochchi depot junction, and the protest commenced  on the leadership of Sri Lanka Freedom party, Kilinochchi district organizer Geethanjali, which was against US and the Geneva resolution.

The protest commenced at 10.30 a.m on 11th March  near Kilinochchi Central College, and marched through A9 route to the depot junction and slogans were chanted against US and against the UNHRC  resolution.

Sri Lanka Freedom party organizer Geethanjali at this protest chanted many slogans loudly,  “You take care of your job”, ” We will look after our work”, “Don’t interfere in our internal affairs for your benefits unnecessarily” ” When war was in occurrence, you backed to destroy the people”, “now don’t attempt to impede our people living peacefully”, “Our leader is Mahinda Rajapakse, none could topple Mahinda Rajapakse’s government” “Our historic hero is Mahinda” was the slogans loudly voiced by the Organizer.

The protest which was organized by the ruling party was attended by the former rebels recruited to the civil defense force. They were forcibly requested to attend.

The protestors were in the state of attempting to hide their faces from the cameras stated our special correspondent from Kilinochchi to “Global Tamil news” desk.

Mainly the vehicles traveling through A9 route are intercepted and passengers were forced to join the protest states information.

Some former rebels contacted us said, that many of them are not aware of this protest. They were loaded into buses and are detained with police protection. With much fear they related that they are compelled to attend the protest rally.

Protest arranged in Vavuniya against UN. Those joined to civil forces ay be forced to participate

Sri Lanka government has organized a protest at Vavuniya opposing to the resolution proposed  by US against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC.

This protest is to be  held  in Vavuniya on 13th March.

Sri Lanka forces and ruling political parties are engaged in taking extreme measures in organizing,  is according to information catered from Vanni to “Global Tamil news” desk.

Those assigned as civil forces at the farm near the Iranaimadu Army headquarters, the farm close to Jayapuram which is located in the raod leading to Mulankavi, those assigned in the forces farms in the Vishwamadu locality and the Military  farms located in the Mullaitheevu district had been called by the forces to attend the protest. 

Reports further say  that the forces have targeted approximately two thousand persons for this procession.

Sri Lanka government’s Civil Defense Department has already appointed on temporary basis, 2200 ‘rehabilitated’ former female rebels  and 800 ‘rehabilitated’ former male rebels  for the position of Civil Officers. However all of them are forced to work in the farms run  by the Defense Ministry. 

This rebels who had joined as Civil Defense officers, are assigned to work as slaves in the military farms, beyond their likes and dislikes, and they may be compelled for other assignments like protests.  
- Edited version form the Global Tamil News web


The 3 Most Important Duty Bearers Of The Country Trivialise Violence Against Women And Children

By Gotamini Hathurusinghe -March 13, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphMany Human Rights Organizations which stand up for the oppressed and the wronged – those who find themselves unable to raise their own voice against injustice, are appalled and alarmed at the way the serious issue of violence is trivialised and denied by HE the President, the de Facto Chief Justice and the Attorney General.
The statement by Mohan Pierisde Facto CJ on Corporal Punishment , is an abomination, reflecting the kind of thinking that exists at the highest level of the Judiciary. If this is the attitude he takes on Corporal Punishment, the children of this country have no chance of obtaining justice and fair play on any of their issues.
This also reflects the poor capacity of thinking and the lack of sensitisation about such issues that can make or break a human being. If scant regard is given to the ills faced by one’s fellow citizens  and such people in key decision making positions, depend only on the technicalities of the law, it is no wonder that half baked judgements are granted from the CJ downwards to the most junior magistrate. When such a degree of insensitivity is coupled with a lack of integrity and bumsucking the powers that be with whom one maintains a relationship of patronage, the resultant judicial process is a maelstrom of disaster as is seen in the form of a tragicomedy of our times.
Let us turn to The Attorney General, Mr Palitha Fernando, who at a meeting some months ago, deemed the sexual abuse of children trivial compared to the Z score issue, as he was anxious to get rid of rights activists who were at a meeting with him regarding the scale of child abuse and violence against women that is taking place. Mr Fernando also is in denial about child rape as evinced by the statements he has made at a number of events including the Sessions of the Medico Legal Society. He in turn trivialised child rape by saying in the colloquial idiom ” this is not really rape, you know most of these are girl friend, boy friend issues!”
Statutory rape cannot be condoned, Mr Palitha Fernando, and you shelve grave sexual abuse of minors also under this categorisation. You also do not accept the excellent report prepared by Mr Thiranagama on Suspended Sentencing on Rape and this very important study is relegated to a pile of dust collectors. You live in denial.
Extracts from the media regarding this study:
In The Anuradhapura High Court relating to a statutory rape case where an interpretation was sought on the mandatory minimum sentence under the 1995 Amendment to the Penal Code, LHRD Executive Director and senior attorney Kalyananda Thiranagama said.
The reference related to a High Court trial of an incident of sexual abuse that had taken place years ago where an accused and an underage victim were lovers. However the couple had later got married and was leading a successful married life. The Supreme Court had ruled that, “the High Court is not inhibited from imposing a sentence that it deems appropriate in the exercise of its judicial discretion notwithstanding the minimum mandatory sentence.”
“However using this Supreme Court direction, lenient punishments and suspended sentences are imposed despite there being a 400 per cent increase in complaints relating to child abuse around the country,” Mr. Thiranagama said.
He said the study had revealed that even convicts of gang rape of underage females including school children had been given suspended sentences by courts.
Through the Penal Code (Amendment) Act No.22 of 1995, a number of positive steps to protect children and women from various types of abuses were introduced.
Mr. Thiranagama said that these included the introduction of new offences which state that every person under 18 years of age is considered a child and increasing punishment meted out on offences committed against children.
He said that another important amendment to the law was the inclusion of the mandatory minimum sentence to convicts of rape and child molestation.
The highest in the land HE Mahinda Rajapakse, too is believed not to take Domestic Violence very seriously as an issue, as he has inquired as to whether the Domestic Violence Act of 2005, is exacerbating the rate of divorce in Sri Lanka. Well Mr President, one can only but ponder on your  level of  thinking and awareness on such a scurrilous issue, especially being a lawyer yourself. Anyone else can be forgiven.
What chance do the people of Sri Lanka have, with such duty or lack of duty bearers. It is a dream that the Women of the North and East who have been subjected to Rape and a number of Human Rights abuses, would find any justice in this land.
Rights based organizations such as Amnesty International, The International Crisis Group and Human Rights Watch are held in abbhorence by the ignorant intelligentsia and powers that be of this country. These blind followers  are constantly in denial of crimes committed by the state and its goons as they are engulfed in mass hysteria of triumphalism after the war. In fact mass euphoria is now converted into hysteria and beyond that into hallucination. So,  a majority of  such people who know the truth very well and continue to ignore it are complicit  to the crime by their denial and the attitude of burying one’s head in the sand.
Such people in turn, egg on the persons such as the duty bearers afore mentioned to continue their campaign of trivializing violence against the most vulnerable – women and children.

“My army can be trusted. They are disciplined. They can surrender if they come with white flags” –President’s words to Chandranehru

Wednesday, 13 March 2013 
A Cabinet minister said that there was no surprise in President Mahinda Rajapaksa rejecting the murder of Prabhakaran’s son, Balachandran after having given an assurance to former parliamentarian C. Chandranehru, who was negotiating with the President on behalf of the LTTE at the time, that LTTE leaders could surrender to the army carrying white flags and that they would not be harmed.
Former parliamentarian Chandanehru had discussed the surrender of LTTE leaders with the President on midnight on May 17, 2009 following a request received from Nadesan and Pulidevan.
Pulidevan had first tried to clear a path for the LTTE leaders to surrender through British journalist who was killed in Syria, Marie Colvin, through the UN Secretary General’s Chief of Staff Vijay Nambiar and Norwegian special envoy Erik Solheim.
After all these had failed, Nadesan had contacted Chandranehru and asked him to contact the President and forward the request. The President had told Chandranehru on the morning of May 18, 2009 that the LTTE leaders could surrender to the army carrying white flags.
Chandranehru had asked the President to provide him with a helicopter and other required facilities to travel to Mullaitvu to prepare the necessary groundwork for the surrender.
“My army can be trusted. They are disciplined. They can surrender if they carry white flags,” the President had assured Chandranehru.
Chandranehru had in turn informed the LTTE leaders that they could surrender carrying white flags.
 Canada reiterates call for an independent investigation into Sri Lanka's rights violations
Tue, Mar 12, 2013, 11:41 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Lankapage LogoMar 12, Geneva: Canada reiterated its call for an independent investigation into Sri Lanka's right violations at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions on Tuesday at Geneva.
Delivering a statement at the General Debate, Canada urged the Sri Lankan government to implement without delay the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and reconciliation Commission (LLRC) through its National Action Plan.
"As host of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting this year, Sri Lanka must demonstrate its commitment to the Commonwealth's fundamental values and principles," Canada said.
Canada called on the Sri Lankan authorities to establish an independent investigation into credible allegations of humanitarian law and human right violations committed during the conflict.
Ireland, speaking on behalf of the European Union said the given the very limited progress of the last year, the EU believes that the current human rights situation in Sri Lanka, and accountability and reconciliation, should remain on the agenda of the UNHRC.
The United Kingdom also expressed its concern about the human rights situation in Sri Lanka and welcomed the opportunity to discuss it at the general debate.