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 15, 2013


Update:15 Petitions Were Filed In The SC Challenging The Constitutionality Of 11 Bills

By Colombo Telegraph -March 14, 2013 
Colombo Telegraph15 petitions were filed in the Supreme Courts today challenging the constitutionality of 11 of the Bills tabled in parliament last Friday.  The challenged Bills are; Strategic Development Projects (Amendment), Betting and Gaming Levy (Amendment),Nation Building Tax (Amendment),Fiscal Management (Responsibility) (Amendment),Finance, Value Added Tax (Amendment),  Inland Revenue (Amendment), Notaries (Amendment), Powers of Attorney (Amendment), Registration of Documents (Amendment) and Tax Appeals Commission (Amendment). 21 Bills below were presented last Friday;
Presentation of Bills 
The Hon. Leader of the House of Parliament moved the following Bills:-
1. Fiscal Management (Responsibility) (Amendment)
(to amend the Fiscal Management (Responsibility) Act, No. 3 of 2003.)
2. Economic Service Charge (Amendment)
(to amend the Economic Service Charge Act, No. 13 of 2006.)
3. Excise (Amendment)
(to amend the Excise Ordinance (Chapter 52).)
4. Strategic Development Projects (Amendment)
(to amend the Strategic Development Projects Act, No.14 of 2008.)
5. Ports and Airports Development Levy (Amendment)
(to amend the Ports and Airports Development Levy Act, No. 18 of 2011.)
6. Telecommunication Levy (Amendment)
(to amend the Telecommunication Levy Act, No. 21 of 2011.)
7. Value Added Tax (Amendment)
(to amend the Value Added Tax Act, No. 14 of 2002.)
8. Customs (Amendment)
(to amend the Customs Ordinance (Chapter 235))
9. Betting and Gaming Levy (Amendment)
(to amend the Betting and Gaming Levy Act, No. 40 of 1988.)
10. Nation Building Tax (Amendment)
(to amend the Nation Building Tax Act, No. 9 of 2009.)
11. Inland Revenue (Amendment)
(to amend the Inland Revenue Act, No. 10 of 2006.)
12. Tax Appeals Commission (Amendment)
(to amend the Tax Appeals Commission Act, No. 23 of 2011.)
13. Finance
(to amend the Finance Act, No 16 of 1995, the Finance Act, No.25 of 2003, the Finance Act, No. 12 of 2012 and the Finance Act, No. 11 of 1963; to provide for the imposition of a crop insurance levy; and to provide for matters connected therewith and incidental thereto.)
14. Marriage Registration (Amendment)
(to amend the Marriage Registration Ordinance (Chapter 112))
15. Muslim Marriage and Divorce (Amendment)
(to amend the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act (Chapter 115).)
16. Births and Deaths Registration (Amendment)
(to amend the Births and Deaths Registration Act (Chapter 110).)
17. Notaries (Amendment)
(to amend the Notaries Ordinance (Chapter 107).)
18. Kandyan Marriage and Divorce (Amendment)
(to amend the Kandyan Marriage and Divorce Act (Chapter 113))
19. Registration of Documents (Amendment)
(to amend the Registration of Documents Ordinance (Chapter 117).)
20. Powers of Attorney (Amendment)
(to amend the Powers of Attorney Ordinance (Chapter 122).)
21. Resettlement Authority (Amendment)
(to amend the Resettlement Authority Act, No. 9 of 2007.)

How Britain can avert a human rights disaster

New Statesman HomeA case in Sri Lanka demonstrates that leaving justice in the hands of politicians cannot be countenanced.
Indian activists burn an effigy of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse. Photograph: Getty Images
Indian activists burn an effigy of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse.
PUBLISHED 14 MARCH 2013
The Commonwealth – the 54 ostensibly democratic nations formerly known as “the British Commonwealth” – is sleepwalking towards a human rights disaster. That will happen if it goes ahead with the high point in its calendar: the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), scheduled for November in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where it will be hosted by the country’s president, Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Perhaps emboldened by getting away with murder – the army’s slaughter of 40,000 Tamil civilians in 2008 and 2009 – Rajapaksa’s government has now moved to destroy a pillar of the rule of law, the independence of the judiciary. It has sacked Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake for daring to make a decision that it finds inconvenient.
Bandaranayake was the first woman to be made a Supreme Court judge in Sri Lanka and was dean of Colombo University’s law school. Last year, she enraged the government by declaring unconstitutional a bill introduced by the president’s brother Basil Rajapaksa, the minister for economic development, which would have centralised political power, especially at the expense of the Northern (largely Tamil) Province and given the minister wide-ranging powers to infringe civil liberties. The government decided to remove her: 117 tame MPs introduced a bill to impeach her on 14 charges of alleged “misconduct”.
Impeachment is an arcane process in which parliament tries the misconduct charges and requests the head of state to remove a guilty jurist. Normally the judge is first convicted of a crime by the courts and is impeached on the basis of that finding, reached by an independent and impartial tribunal. The principle of judicial independence requires that no judge should be impeached for doing his or her duty merely because the decision has upset the government. Yet that is what the Rajapaksa government has done in the case of Bandaranayake.
The result was a foregone conclusion. She was found guilty on three charges of misconduct on evidence that would not stand up in any real court and would not amount to misconduct under any sensible definition of that term. Her impeachment was celebrated with a fireworks display from the Sri Lankan navy and with entertainment, feasts and more fireworks supplied by the government to crowds outside her home. Perhaps the nastiest aspect of all this was the government’s tactic of bussing in demonstrators with placards abusing the chief justice and encouraging the state media to join in the witch-hunt.
A visit to Sri Lanka by the Queen, as the head of the Commonwealth, would provide a propaganda windfall – a royal seal of approval – to the host president after his destruction of the country’s judicial independence. It would be a mockery of the core democratic values for which the Commonwealth is supposed to stand. The Foreign Secretary, William Hague, has been silent on the subject but the UK will have one last chance to save the situation when a CHOGM planning meeting is held in London in April – an opportunity to switch the meeting to the alternative venue, the exemplary democracy of Mauritius. If that fails, the Queen should stay at home and the UK should be represented by a junior diplomat.
What can be done about the 117 Sri Lankan MPs who brought fabricated charges against a judge for doing her duty and the seven government ministers who tried her so unfairly? There is a new tool to name and shame those who share some responsibility for human rights abuses – the “train drivers to Auschwitz”, so to speak – without whose participation such events would not be possible. It is called a Magnitsky act, after the US law ratified by President Obama last December. As applied to Sri Lankan politicians, it would deny them entry visas and freeze any bank accounts they hold in this country. If the UK parliament believes in doing something about human rights abroad, it should adopt this tactic as a way of deterring abuses of power by those with links to Britain.
The process of impeachment was left to Sri Lanka as a colonial legacy. Britain has not impeached a high court judge since 1830 (for embezzling court funds) and it would be inconceivable today without a prior criminal conviction. Yet leaving justice in the hands of politicians – in Bandaranayake’s case, malicious ones – cannot be countenanced.
As for the Commonwealth, when some of its governments criticised Sri Lanka at the UN, that country’s ambassador replied: “What is the value of the Commonwealth?” If CHOGM goes ahead at Colombo, the answer will be very clear.
Readers can download Geoffrey Robertson QC’s legal opinion on the impeachment of Sri Lanka’s chief justice from  barhumanrights.org.uk


Commonwealth struggles for unity amid Sri Lanka HR concerns

Asian Correspondent Asia News


Canada’s special envoy for the Commonwealth Hugh Segal is on his way to Sri Lanka as pressure mounts to relocate the Commonwealth’s heads of government meeting being held in Colombo later this year because of concerns over deteriorating human rights. Canada’s Prime Minister has said he has no plan to attend the meeting if it’s held in Sri Lanka. Britain says it has yet to decide, though a parliamentary foreign affairs select committee recommended the Prime Minister stay away and there are unconfirmed reports that the Queen, who heads the Commonwealth, will not attend.
Sri Lanka stands accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity at the end of the civil war in 2009, killing between 40,000 to 70,000 of its own citizens, according to the United Nations. In the four years since the fighting stopped the President and his family have concentrated power and resources in their hands, refused to offer even the most modest political solution to Tamils, outraged the international community by the way they impeached the country’s Chief Justice and presided over disappearances, torture and rape in custody as well as increasing attacks on Muslims. The international community has struggled to find signs of post-war progress – only able to point to the construction of new roads.

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II , right, shakes hands with Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa at a Commonwealth event in London last year. Pic: AP.
Canada leads a group within the 54-nation block, which negotiated much needed reforms and believes Sri Lanka is a test case for them and the new charter championed by the Queen. “The risk is people will conclude the new formulation of values and enforcement actually don’t mean anything at all,” says Senator Segal, who will meet both Tamils in the former war zone and the President during his fact-finding mission to Sri Lanka.
Holding the Commonwealth’s main gathering in Colombo rubber stamps the Rajapaksa regime, endorsing its extreme Sinhala chauvinist agenda and whitewashing war crimes. As the host, Sri Lanka will head the 54-nation body for two years and automatically sit on the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group, which is tasked with taking action on thorny issues like democracy and rule of law. Observers say if Sri Lanka were not hosting the Heads of Government meeting this November it would have already been referred to the Ministerial Action group for discussion. Concern over the logistics of relocating or postponing the event – rather than core values – has obscured the issue. For Canada’s special envoy, “the notion of pretending as if nothing is going on in Sri Lanka that justifies a CMAG meeting is untenable”.
The Ministerial Action Group meets on April 26 but it’s still not clear if it will even discuss Sri Lanka, let alone ask for its temporary suspension. The Commonwealth Secretary General can raise an issue – or a consensus of members can do so. About 15 Commonwealth countries are said to support a Canadian bid to have Sri Lanka put on the meeting’s agenda; more may join once a US sponsored resolution passes at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva a week from now. Under new procedures any Commonwealth nation can ask for Sri Lanka to be discussed – not just those sitting on the Ministerial Action Group.
But the Commonwealth likes to operate by consensus and it’s paralysed by division on the issue of Sri Lanka. Some argue the emphasis on human rights is a preoccupation of Western nations – the old white commonwealth. Others say Sri Lanka is a watershed moment for the organisation’s relevance and commitment to democratic values. The Commonwealth’s Secretary General is one of those who believes in engagement with Sri Lanka; he was seen in public at a recent official dinner in London warmly embracing the Sri Lankan Ambassador which raised some eyebrows.
For months there has been discussion about what might happen to the November meeting. Some say there are precedents for relocating commonwealth meetings but that’s rapidly getting late for such a large-scale event with a host of side meetings. There’s a suggestion that the event could be scaled down considerably and held in Delhi. Postponement is another option being discussed.
What’s at stake is the reputation of the Commonwealth – a diverse group of nations united by shared values. Soon it will be led by a country that committed war crimes on a scale that the UN says, “represented a grave assault on the entire regime of international law”.

‘Defaming Allah’ In Kandy

Buddhist leaders are not in �Pothu Bala Sena� movement. Vasu says don't deceive Sinhala people


Gotabhaya Rajapaksa And His Bala Sena

By Tisaranee Gunasekara -March 14, 2013
Colombo Telegraph“Is there no asylum safe enough from your insane and blinded fury?”Schiller (The Bride of Messina)
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa was the Chief Guest at the opening of Meth Sevana, the Buddhist Leadership Academy of the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS). In his speech Mr. Rajapaksa said that he decided to attend the event “after realising its timely importance”; according to him, “these Buddhist clergy who are engaged in a nationally important task should not be feared or doubted by anyone” (Sri Lanka Mirror – 10.3.2013).



Who is in Pothu Bala Sena? Buddhist religious leaders are not members? We cannot accept what they say, was said by Minister of National Languages and Social Integration Vasudeva Nanayakara.


If Pothu Bala Sena acts against government law, legal action will be taken against it. He said, a new Halal mechanism should be formulated   for the Muslims to purchase only Halal foods,   said by Minister at a special interview given to "Udayan" press.

He queried who are the members of Pothu Bala Sena movement? They are not Buddhist religious leaders? We cannot accept what they say; Sinhala people should not be deceived by listening to them.

Pothu Bala sena movement cannot deceive the Sinhala people of this country. But their operations have become a massive crisis to the Muslim community of this country. Hence should bring an end to this problem.

A subcommittee was appointed by the Cabinet to explore the activities advanced by the Pothu Bala sena movement against Muslims.

This subcommittee is now scrutinizing.  Accordingly a peaceful settlement will be met for the Halal crisis.

Even though the Sinhala and Tamil communities reject Halal foods in the country, a legal mechanism will be worked out to deal with the Halal certification of food items, for the Muslim people to consume Halal food.

 If Pothu Bala Sena movement acts against the law of this country, legal action would be taken against them was said by Minister
Friday , 15 March 2013

OP-ED: The Commonwealth Charter, Human Rights and Sri Lanka

Sir Ronald Sanders
Sir Ronald Sanders
Huntington NewsBY SIR RONALD SANDERS-Thursday, March 14, 2013
 The most important reason for the selection of a country as the host-venue for a Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) is that it serves the interests of the Commonwealth as a whole.
If this reason were a consideration, President Mahinda Rajapaksa would already have withdrawn Sri Lanka from hosting the CHOGM in November.  The President has not done so.  Instead, he has insisted that the Commonwealth Summit must be held in Sri Lanka even as his government is mired in intense controversy over violations of human rights and disregard for the rule of law.
By this insistence, the Sri Lanka President demonstrates only an ambition to claim honour and respectability through hosting the meeting and representing the Commonwealth for the next two years as its Chair. This self-serving position of the Sri Lanka government is injuring the Commonwealth.
Every member state of the Commonwealth –- particularly its small and weak ones -- needs the Organisation to be strong and credible.  A discredited Commonwealth, that cannot stand-up for its own declared values, would have no moral authority or convincing status to advocate effectively for the welfare of its member countries in the international community. 
President Rajapaksa’s dismissal of the country’s Chief Justice, Shirani Bandaranayake, after an unfair impeachment process that was ruled illegal by the Supreme Court, and the appointment of his former Attorney-General to the post, is “serious” and it comes amid evidence of “persistent” human rights abuses of journalists, and other groups within Sri Lanka.
These developments follow the government’s refusal to allow an independent inquiry, as requested by the United Nations, into the deaths of tens of thousands of Tamil civilians in 2009 towards the end of a conflict between government forces and the Tamil Tigers.
The unsuitability of Sri Lanka at this time to host the CHOGM is drawn into stark clarity by the Charter of the Commonwealth that was signed on March 11 by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II as Head of the Commonwealth after the complete concurrence of 53 of the Commonwealth’s 54 Heads of Government.  The fifty-fourth member state, Fiji whose military government seized power in 2006, is currently suspended from the Councils of the Commonwealth.
The Charter was one of the important recommendations for reform of the Commonwealth made by an Eminent Persons Group (EPG) of which I was privileged to be a member.  The recommendation was accepted by all Commonwealth Heads of Government at their meeting in Australia in October 2011.
An important clause in the Charter reads: “We are committed to equality and respect for the protection and promotion of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights including the right to development, for all without discrimination on any grounds as the foundations of peaceful, just and stable societies”.  Unless the Sri Lanka government demonstrates that it upholds that commitment through actions that have been urged upon it by the UN, many Commonwealth Governments, and a myriad number of international legal and judicial organisations, it is not qualified to host the CHOGM.  Attendance by other Heads of Government would sully the Commonwealth by validating the Rajapaksa government.  
This is not the first time that the Commonwealth has had to deal with violations of its values and principles by a member state.  It did so in 1977 in relation to Idi Amin whose brutal regime in Uganda engaged in massive violation of human rights and sustained disregard for the sanctity of life.
At that time, the Commonwealth Secretary-General, Shridath Ramphal, said to Commonwealth leaders: “There has been in the Commonwealth, of course, as in the international community, a long and necessary tradition of non-interference in the internal affairs of other states. No commonwealth country (indeed, who anywhere in the world?) is above reproach in some respect or other. If these traditions were not to be respected there would be no end to recrimination and censoriousness. How to strike a balance of political judgement between the two extremes of declamation and silence is sometimes difficult – but it would be entirely illusory to believe that such a judgment could, or indeed should, be avoided altogether. There will be times in the affairs of the Commonwealth   when one member’s conduct will provoke the wrath of others beyond the limits of silence.... although the line may be indefinable, all the world will know when it has been crossed.”
It had been crossed in Uganda; and at their meeting in 1977, Commonwealth leaders stated that it was their “overwhelming view” that the excesses of Amin’s regime “were so gross as to warrant the world’s concern and to evoke condemnation by Heads of Government in strong and unequivocal terms”.
In those days, there was no Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) as there is now, tasked with dealing with States where the Commonwealth’s declared values have been violated.  Nonetheless, Heads of Government themselves made it clear that the excesses of Idi Amin were unacceptable, as they did later with the white minority government of Ian Smith in Southern Rhodesia (later Zimbabwe) and the Apartheid regime in South Africa.
As CMAG has since suspended other member states – Fiji, Nigeria, Zimbabwe and Pakistan – after addressing their violations of Commonwealth values, it should do so now with Sri Lanka, or the freshly minted Commonwealth Charter will simply become another set of words, not worth the paper on which they are inscribed in the name of the people of the Commonwealth.
There is also precedent for moving a Commonwealth meeting if the host government has breached Commonwealth agreed principles and values. In 1981, the New Zealand Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon, ignored the 1977 Gleneagles Agreement that banned sporting contact with Apartheid South Africa.  Muldoon strongly supported the South Africa Springbok Rugby team's tour to New Zealand. Commonwealth governments, feeling that Muldoon had violated agreed Commonwealth principles and values, moved a Finance Ministers meeting from New Zealand to the Bahamas as a mark of their displeasure.
The Sri Lanka government should withdraw from hosting the CHOGM in November, or the other Commonwealth countries should withdraw themselves from attending. Either action would strengthen the Commonwealth and enhance its authority. But, on no account should the CHOGM be held in Sri Lanka.
Sanders is a Consultant, former Caribbean diplomat and Vistiing Fellow, London University. Responses and previous commentaries at: www.sirronaldsanders.com 

Reparations Across All Divides


By S. Sivathasan -March 15, 2013  
S. Sivathasan
Colombo TelegraphWhat really was lost by all groups – ethnic, religious and class – in the years of war, turmoil displacement and emigration? The accumulations of several decades of individual enterprise and effort helped by the collective support of the state were damaged, destroyed or expropriated. Do the deprived have the means, the will or the resilience for a fresh start? No. Pro active initiatives by the state with liberal funding through aid by the international community and spread over a long period are needed to resuscitate individual economy as well as collective life. A spirited beginning is called for and a sustained demand needs to be made for the state to give substance to it.  
Tamilian Frailty
Why are the Tamils in the position in which they are from the time of independence? Many a Tamil would attribute it to one reason. “We are not united” is the unexamined factor that is blithely advanced. “They are not united” for us to parley with and to agree on any settlement, is the handy refrain of non-Tamils, lukewarm to a changed future. This senseless way of arguing needs to be ruthlessly rooted out. For the Tamils of Sri Lankathere is a paralytic obsession with unity or the absence of it, to deny the sharp tasks of today. A troubled conscience is thereby salved and we move into our comfortable routine. Is unity a condition for moving forward? Do past happenings the world over support it?
Disagreements Are a Common Feature
Tension is greatest at the nodal points. Evidence of it may be seen in the twentieth century when the world itself was in turmoil and was striving for change. In the decades preceding the Russian Revolution, a galaxy of intellectuals from Plekhanov to Lenin and Trotsky were drawn in as revolutionaries. They had the fiercest debates and the sharpest differences before they were able to forge the best strategies for success. TheCommunist Party itself split into two and Bolsheviks the majority moved forward eclipsing the Mensheviks, the minority segment. In the name of strength no time was wasted on chimerical unity. The fittest enlivened the masses in their favour.
In India too similar happenings were seen. From Gandhi’s advent to time of independence, there was no smooth sailing. Tilak, Gandhi, Nehru, Patel and Bose were towering and charismatic. Yet the British manufactured synthetic leaders – Aga Khan and Ramaswamy Mudaliyar among others. The authentic leadership would have no truck with the spurious. An unbridgeable chasm however developed in 1939 when Bose was President of the INC and he struck out a line of action disagreeable to the leaders. The Congress leadership took the unprecedented step of removing the incumbent President. When the overweening consideration was India’s independence, some counterfeit appearance of unanimity was irrelevant.
The same story holds for China and the Communist Party, particularly in the period 1927 and 1949. Whatever the intrusive directions from Russia and Stalin, Mao’s sagacity prevailed virtually at all times. He conceptualized, organized and led. During this period there was a continuing process of winnowing and the leader remained steadfast with unshakeable faith in his discernment, strategies and approaches. Never was there an attempt to bloat cadre strength through fake compromise.
The above is just a brief recount of the way in which those who created history set about their tasks. Historical evidence is legion. Life experience to has taught us the same lessons. It is for the genius of the leadership to capture the mood of the masses, chart a future course of promise and to lead them to victory. This applies to the issue of reparations in Sri Lanka. Those in governance and the leadership of ethnic entities have a shared responsibility.
Needs Assessment Study 2003
The stance of living in isolation was briefly set aside from 2002 to 2007. With the help of foreign powers and funding institutions like Asian Development Bank, World Bank, JBIC and JAICA aid flowed in. Professionals did a commendable job in preparing a 1800 page document for the North East and another 1600 pages for adjoining districts affected by the war till the Ceasefire of 2002. The sectors covered were 17 and this report served as the foundation for the programme of restitution and rehabilitation. It set out an investment magnitude of $4.5 billion and an achievement of 10% was reached by 2007. Officialdom along with their retired counterparts measured up to the mission. Of great significance was the broadminded attitude and  statesmanship displayed by HE the President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumarathunga. Of as much importance was the proactive support of the Prime Minister, Hon. Ranil Wickremasinghe. They did not say with a single wave of the hand that such a programme was not needed. Reparations can work if the same attitude could prevail in the future as well.
Germany and Israel
From earlier years we have to come to recent times. Germany and Israel offer the world a lesson in going from the worst of relationship to acceptable norms of conduct. With statesmanship on both sides together with steps that assuaged misgivings and built trust, a new order emerged. It didn’t however come easily. First there was disbelief that either party could be honest about it’s professions. The leadership of Adenauer in West Germany and of Ben Gurion the PM of Israel, changed the picture. Ben Gurion said bluntly, “I am not going to go to America to take part in a vigil against Adenauer”. He added “I don’t want to run after a German and spit in his face”. Solution of the material problem to ease the way to a spiritual settlement, was Adenauer’s approach.
Implementation commenced with solemn sentiments and was yet fraught with setbacks. In Israel though there was no conceptual reservation about reparations or on the pattern of disbursement, the absence of trust or positive distrust virtually derailed the process. A five hour demonstration by Israelis against receiving payment resulted in 200 arrests and injury to 200 demonstrators and to 140 policemen. The PM stood firm and the decision was approved 61-50 in 1953. It was stated that in 1957 reparations became a decisive part of Israel’s income at 87.5%. Germany too had a similar experience with stiff opposition. In both countries leadership triumphed.
As of now Sri Lanka stands at a similar juncture. Without trust being built, no progress can be contemplated. Four years are past for just nothing. Reparations comprehensively understood will take two decades or more to deliver. Can funds be mobilized is the question. Yes is the answer. From where? Local and foreign is the reply. Before that a counter question. In the last seven years was there a single project of the powers that be that was not taken up for want of funds? The answer is no. For the reparations programme, if the need is appreciated, consequential action will follow and funds can flow.
Sri Lanka’s Supposed Robust Economy
As per official documents, the economy is doing fine. The GDP has near trebled in 2012 compared to 2005. This miracle has boosted capacity and confidence to borrow. In 2005, Public Debt totaled Rs. 2.222 trillion and was was 102.3% of GDP.  In 2012 it was more than Rs. 6.262 trillion and was 78.5%.  Exponential GDP growth permitted a near trebling of public debt in 7 years. One cannot have it both ways. The government cannot prate about close to trebling national income in just 7 years and yet continue to deny to the deprived and the devastated their legitimate due. It is to this voiceless group that one seeks to give a voice. Those prostrated by the state must be enabled to rise again by the same state.
The robust GDP accommodates in 2013, Rs. 289.5 billion of which 95% is for the coercive apparatus, the armed forces and the police. In contrast is the allocation of Rs.65.8 billion for Education and Higher Education, less than a quarter as for the armed forces. This sector employs as many as the forces if not more and student beneficiaries are in excess of 4 million. If people are with the Regime, why is this dread of the populace? State munificence extends to unproductive employment as well with 1 minor employee for every 4.2 officers in staff and non-staff grades. In semi government institutions, 40% are minor employees. Do the developed countries extend this luxury of retainers for the officer class?
What Next?
Earnest endeavor. Handling reparations is not difficult when financial profligacy is contained and public spending is rationalized. Even more is inevitable local and foreign borrowing to benefit the future of those who are now forlorn. The beneficiaries will be across all divides, ethnic, religious or class. It is for those in governance to get a programme crafted, to finance it and to see it through.
A common wealth of values that Sri Lanka does not share
Editorial Tamil Guardian 15 March 2013



On Monday - Commonwealth Day - the Queen as the head of the Commonwealth, signed a new Charter outlining 16 core beliefs purported to underpin the organisation. The vision set out is a welcome one. Yet the next key Commonwealth event, the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2013 (CHOGM), is due to be held in a country that evidently does not share this vision, nor care to. Four years on, Sri Lanka is no closer to accounting for the crimes of 2009 nor achieving a political solution to prevent renewed violence. Instead, it has exploited its military victory to execute unchecked Sinhalisation and militarisation of the Tamil areas, and consolidated the government’s already overwhelming powers. All the while reports of intimidation, disappearances, torture, and rape by its security forces continue. The stench of Sri Lanka shows no signs of relenting. Whilst a change of venue will not in itself bring accountability or reconciliation to the island, to hold the CHOGM 2013 in Sri Lanka would make a mockery of the Commonwealth and be the endorsement of a state that wilfully falls far short of the Commonwealth’s vision.
How the Commonwealth deals with Sri Lanka will be a litmus test of its future. A report on the organisation in 2011 by the Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group was damning, concluding that the failure to censure unruly member states had rendered it largely irrelevant on the global stage. To Tamils its failure to suspend Sri Lanka in the aftermath of 2009 exemplifies this irrelevancy. If the Commonwealth is to be more than a post-colonial private club, then it must act when member states defy the very values that define it. The Charter of the Commonwealth, as with the previous declarations, makes an admirable read but it is meaningless without tangible implementation. Fear of being labelled as casting the first stone cannot be an excuse for inaction. The Charter is but ideals that no state, within the Commonwealth or beyond, has fully achieved. The benchmark for censure should rather consider the gravity of the state’s crimes and its attitude on accounting for them. It is this consideration that has no doubt guided the Commonwealth during past deliberations, and is what places Sri Lanka beyond the pale. Not only do the Sri Lankan government and its military stand accused of the most serious of crimes, but Sri Lanka has shown only increasing contempt towards accounting for it.
Over the past four years Sri Lanka has revealed its utter disregard for prominent global institutions and individuals such as the UN and The Elders. It has flatly rejected critical UN reports by the Panel of Experts and the High Commissioner’s Office and displayed a shameless lack of seriousness regarding its human rights record by rejecting an unprecedented number of UPR recommendations made by fellow states at its UPR session last year.  When the UK’s Sri Lanka ambassador was asked by Channel 4 News about widespread criticism of Sri Lanka, he retorted: “it’s only you who disagree with us”. It summarily disregards damning photographic and video evidence of crimes as fabrications, and habitually accuses critics of being terrorists. Incredibly, even as the UNHRC discusses another resolution on Sri Lanka, the country's Permanant Representative to the UN in Geneva has declared that Sri Lanka does not recognise the Council’s previous one. Indeed the impeachment of the Chief Justice in the run up to the Council’s, when the government knew another resolution would be likely, further illustrates the country’s sheer audacity.
Four years of quiet diplomacy have only resulted in increasing Sri Lankan defiance, as despite its lack of tangible progress and escalating brazenness, Sri Lanka continues to enjoy normal relations with many countries. It considers events such as the CHOGM jewels in its crown. This cannot continue. If Sri Lanka hosts the CHOGM 2013, with Mahinda Rajapaksa as head honcho welcoming 54 heads of state and the Queen to the island, the Commonwealth would be slipping from irrelevancy to complicity in Sri Lanka’s on-going crimes and impunity. It would be endorsing Sri Lanka’s scornful disregard of the Commonwealth’s shared values. Whilst Canada’s stance is commendable, and Britain’s and Australia’s woefully inadequate, responsibility for the Commonwealth’s vision must lie with all member states. African and Asian states must rise above Sri Lanka’s wolf cries of ‘western imperialism’ and take on this responsibility if the organisation is to be a league of equals and a meaningful global institution of the future.

SRI LANKA BRIEFSri Lanka has rejected recommendation to ratify ILO Convention 189 while the country enjoys the remittance from migrant workers as high as 6 billion USD for 2012

Nimalka Fernanda: We are talking about men, women and children whose lives are at risk or in danger.


FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013

Thank you Mr. President,
 This is a joint statement made by IMADR, Lawyers Rights Watch Canada and Pasumathai India. We appreciate the new mechanism of UPR. Nevertheless the negotiation process has given rise to reducing the impact of the transparency and effectiveness in built to UPR.
We express grave concern over the rejection of important and significant recommendations by Sri Lanka, especially 128.40 (Canada), 128.55 (Norway), 128.47 (Brazil) that refers to the outstanding visits of the WGIED, introducing special measure to increase women’s participation in politics, accelerating efforts for reconciliation. It is condemnable that Sri Lanka has rejected 128.18 made by the Phillipines to ratify ILO Convention 189 while the country enjoys the remittance from migrant workers which was as high as 6 billion USD for 2012. The substantive issues of accountability, impunity, strengthening rule of law etc. were raised in 2008. It is regrettable to note that member states who raised these issues not following up the same with GOSL regarding the progress made in relation to recommendations proposed by them. For example Japan focused on the issue of disappearances in 2008. To date GOSL has not invited the Working Group to Sri Lanka. It has not acknowledge requests of over 8 important Mandate holders.

Women comprises 52% of the population in Sri Lanka.  Official statistics admits that there is 23% percent female headed households in the country. Sri Lanka has continued to ignore calls to facilitate both economic assistance and policy formulation to increase women’s participation in politics and decision making. It has not learn from friends like Pakistan and India who have made great strides in this area. Women in the war affected North and East have not been involved in decision making related to rebuilding lives and designing livelihood programmes. How can claims be made re MDG targets when the budget allocation for the Ministry of Women remain stagnant at a dismal 0.02% while the Defence budget soars every year. The defense budget for 2013 was increased by 25% which is a staggering amount of $2.2 billion.

Words and reports do not reflect the ground realities. For full enjoyment of rights conducive environment has to be created. Freedom of movement, speech and association are integral to the full enjoyment of human rights. Today Tamil people in the North and East remain chained to the past, militarized with surveillance round the clock. Muslim community is facing threats from a neo-fascist Buddhist force nurtured by the Defense establishment called Bodubalasena. UPR can be meaningful only to the extent that critical areas are discussed openly and challenges identified collectively. UPR provides the Council to constructively address issues of accountability and compliance of member states. In this regard we hope that HRC will link all processes together and not compartmentalize human rights mechanisms and processes providing states an easy way out to wriggle out of international obligations. We are talking about men, women and children whose lives are at risk or in danger. Of human beings whose survival remains in our hands.
Thank you Mr. President.
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IMADR Oral Statement: 22nd Session of the Human Rights Council, adoption of Sri Lanka UPR report  on 15 March 2013
Item 6: Consideration of UPR reports: Sri Lanka
15 March 2013