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

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Friday , 05 April 2013
Land Development Ministry inaugurated the Jaffna district office and emphasized that it would handle in finding a settlement to the peoples land crisis, but land confiscations by the forces is advanced in full swing, not even one month is completed of its operations.

A considerable amount of private properties were confiscated by the forces in the Jaffna district, and public announcements are circulated through the Jaffna district land recovery office.
The declarations are exhibited for people’s observation. 
The Land and Land Development Ministry inaugurated the Jaffna district office on last 11th at the Jaffna district secretariat.
Land Minister during the inauguration ceremony held in Jaffna said, this office would settle the land crisis of the Jaffna district people.
Minister emphasized, public lands would not be confiscated by the forces, and this office is not launched for that purpose, however not even a month is completed after the inauguration of this office,  but the lands requested by the forces in the different areas in the Jaffna district, activities are processed speedily by the newly opened office.
The agreement from Mr. A.Sivaswamy, recovery official attached to Jaffna district land and land development ministry, under section 2 of the declaration - law of the land (cl.460) this declaration is displayed in public places.

Forces have requested private properties in some divisional secretariats coming under the 15 divisional secretariats situated in the Jaffna district.

Declaration issued by the Jaffna district office is demonstrated at the lands requested by the forces.  This notification indicates the name of the land owner, and the land required by the military, their requirements and the relevant details.

The notification specifies if land owners refuse to bestow the lands to the forces, they could notify   during investigation. It further quotes that the investigation would be held after 14 days.
Meanwhile activities are processed to make declaration of the private lands grabbed  by the forces inside the high security zone.
Regarding this issue, Jaffna district Government Agent Suntharam Arumainyagam was contacted, and he said, the state land issues will be handled by the Governor and the private land issues are handled by the Jaffna district land and land development ministry's land recovery official. He further emphasized he is not aware about the detail information concerning this.
Regarding this land recovery officer A.Sivasuwasamy was queried, but he refused to express his views to the media.
Temple land acquired illegally in K’nochchi
By Our kilinochchi correspondent-2013-04-05 

Tamil National Alliance MP, S. Sritharan, has brought to the notice of the Government Agent (GA), Kilinochchi, the attempt made by a private firm in Anuradhapura to acquire three acres of land that belongs to the Uthiravengai Vairavar Temple, closer to Kilinochchi town, that comes under the purview of the Kanagambikaikulam Grama Sevaka Division.

MP Sritharan, in a letter to the GA, Kilinochchi, has pointed out that three acres of land of the Uthiravengai Vairavar Temple – which is used for religious activities during the festival season had been illegally taken over by a private firm from Anuradhapura, which does not have any links with Kilinochchi. To compound the problem, the party that had acquired the land has brazenly put up a 'no entry board' on the land as well.

According to Sritharan, the persons who had forcibly taken over the land had even resorted to threatening the trustees of the temple. The land had been owned by the temple for the past 35 years.

Lands belonging to people and public institutions such as temples are illegally acquired by Sri Lankans who come to the North from the southern part of Sri Lanka, Sritharan pointed out.

"Documents pertaining to the particular land are in the possession of the temple administration and the Government Agent should take measures to prevent land being so acquired and also curtail land being taken over by outside parties. The authorities should hand over the land owned by the Uthiravengai Vairavar Temple to the temple trustee, Sritharan urged.
2013-04-05 

Casteism, genocide, work hand in hand in Sinhala mind-set

[TamilNet, Friday, 05 April 2013, 23:49 GMT]
TamilNetCasteist terms used in derogatory ways by Sinhalese in their references towards Tamils reveal the sociological nature of the genocidal mind-set of Sinhalese in the island of Sri Lanka. "How many people outside of Sri Lanka know that 'Sakkiliya' is a Sinhala term used to refer to a Tamil person [...],” asks Christopher Tuckwood, who has introduced a new Internet-based tool, named Hatebase, to study hate language in predicting and preventing genocide. Tuckwood is the Executive Director and Co-founder of The Sentinel Project for Genocide Prevention, a Canada-based non-profit organisation dedicated to detecting and averting genocide throughout the globe. 

Derogatory references to Tamils in a casteist language predate the modern national conflict among nations in the island, commented an Eezham Tamil activist in the island citing the term Para-Demala used by Anagarika Dharmapala. Sinhala language has two meanings for the word Para: one meaning foreigner (from Sanskrit Paradesi) and the other meaning an untouchable (from Dravidian Pa'raiyar). 

While casteism is at the core of the Sinhala mind-set in manifesting into the genocide of Eezham Tamils, a campaign is currently being made among Eezham Tamils that conversion to Buddhism is the way to help them overcome casteism. Even in the mainstream Sinhala-Buddhist chapters such as Malwatta and Asgiriya, no one other than the Goyigama Sinhalese could become monks, the Eezham Tamil activist cited.

The references to the caste terms in derogatory ways are unfortunate as the practice, apart from the genocidal connotations in the island, directly affects the dignity and upward mobility of the concerned aboriginal communities of South Asia, the activist commented.

In this context, the Eezham Tamil activist drew the attention of the Tamils in London on the use of the term ‘Pariah’ by the former British Foreign Secretary David Miliband. 

Ironically, the Labour politician used the British colonial English word originating from derogatory references of the colonialists towards a community of Tamils, to support the Tamil campaign now, without realising that the usage offends an ancient section of Tamils.

Last month, while discouraging the British Queen from attending the CHOGM meet in Sri Lanka, Miliband said that the hosting regime is fast “moving towards pariah status.” 

Pa'raiyar and Chakkiliyar are two ancient communities among Tamils whose identities were pushed down to derogatory status. The Anglo-Indian word Pariah that got into English dictionaries has come from the Pa'raiyar community of Tamils.

Tamils, especially in London, have to boldly tell the English dictionary makers to delist the word. Rather than blindly looking upon the West, the diaspora Tamils have to understand the significance of waging such protests in bringing in an awareness of the nature and continuity of the kind of oppression faced by Tamils under colonialism and then under the succeeding Sinhala colonialism, the Eezham Tamil activist in the island said. 

Casteism and genocide today are significantly connected to the continuity of the colonial mind-set and to the continuity in constant transfer of power and protection on to the oppressors. If the right kind of struggle is not waged with right kind of awareness we would only get into one prison from the other, the activist further said.
* * *

Christopher Tuckwood
Christopher Tuckwood
Meanwhile, explaining the new Internet tool, Hatebase, Mr Christopher Tuckwood on Friday told Wired.co.uk: “Hatebase helps us to know what to look for and to make sense of what we see". 

Wired.co.uk website is an acclaimed monthly magazine that reports primarily on the effects of science and technology.

In a separate introductory article, Timothy Quinn, the ICT advisor of The Sentinel Project, said: “In the information-rich twenty-first century, good data remains the Achilles’ heel of genocide studies.”

Although the core of Hatebase is its community-edited vocabulary of multilingual hate speech, a critical concept in Hatebase is “regionality”, writes Timothy Quinn in his article.

“The users can associate hate speech with geography, thus building a parallel dataset of ‘sightings’, which can be monitored for frequency, localization, migration, and transformation,” Mr Quinn says. 

Hatebase.org
Hatebase.org
Hatebase is available to end users through a Wikipedia-like web interface, and to developers through an Application Programming Interface (API). 

Launched on 25 March 2013, the latest project termed as the world’s largest online database of hate speech has received wider attention with coverage appearing on Foreign Policy Magazine and in the Wired Magazine in the UK. 

However, according to The Sentinel Project, the database is still in its early stages. The developers say that further functionality will be added in the coming months. 

Crowdsourcing is the way of acquiring the content and editing services from a large group of people in an online community.

The mission of The Sentinel Project for Genocide Prevention, founded by Christopher Tuckwood and Taneem Talukdar while they were students at the University of Waterloo in 2008, is to prevent the crime of genocide worldwide through effective early warning and cooperation with victimized peoples to carry out non-violent prevention initiatives.

In 2009, The Sentinel Project's approach was selected as a finalist in Google's 10 to the 100th competition for innovative social application of technology.
Saturday , 06 April 2013
Thousands of people living in Kopay divisional secretariat is struggling without lands, meanwhile approval is given to construct a hotel to a person from Southern Sri Lanka.


To construct this hotel authorization is given to erect the hotel at the Sivan Kovil Adaippu area located at Akkarai village situated at the Kopay divisional secretariat unit.

This land for people’s colonization was allocated in year 1990.  Even though a housing scheme was allocated to the people by the National Housing Directive Board but they were not provided with land deeds.

Land had been allocated near the sports grounds for the construction of a housing scheme to the people.

Recently on long term lease permission has been granted for the construction of a hotel in these lands.

Land surveyors along with military visited this locality two days back Thursday, and took the adequate measurements.  At that time the area people had a conflict with the officials from the Survey Department.

Reports states the Southern Sri Lanka investor who is involved with the hotel construction is a close relative of the  Jaffna district military high official.

Four soldiers arrested with venison
[ Saturday, 06 April 2013, 08:47.34 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Five persons including 4 army soldiers have been arrested in the Jayanthipura area in Kantale this morning for shooting and killing two deer.
Wan Ela Police also took into custody the vehicle, belonging to Sri Lanka Army, used by the suspects to transport the deer meat.
The four army soldiers, including 2 sergeants, are reportedly attached to the intelligence unit of the Gantalawa army camp.
The deer are believed to have been hunted and killed at Serunuwara, police said.
The suspects are to be produced at the Kantale District Court while Wan Ela Police is conducting further investigations.

Sri Lankan diplomat accused of playing North Indians against Tamils

   By  P C Vinoj Kumar
  
06 Apr 2013
Posted 27-Mar-2013
Vol 4 Issue 12
Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner to India, Prasad Kariyawasam, has been accused of instigating North Indians “against not only Eelam Tamils but also the people of Tamil Nadu.”
Making the charge against Prasad, MDMK leader Vaiko in a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Wednesday demanded that the diplomat “be prosecuted under Section 124A of Indian Penal Code.”
Prasad is indulging in activities inimical to the unity of India
Section 124 A, IPC states: "Whoever, by words, either spoken or written, or by signs, or by visible representation, or otherwise, brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the government established by law in India, shall be punished with imprisonment for life, to which fine may be added, or with imprisonment which may extend to three years, to which fine may be added, or with fine."
“The Indian Government should launch criminal prosecution against the High Commissioner by immediately arresting him,” Vaiko has demanded.
Vaiko alleged that Prasad made a statement to the media on March 19, 2013, claiming that the Sinhalese were originally from Odisha and Bengal.
“The High Commissioner has mentioned that the king of Sri Lanka Vijaya came from Kalinga, which is Odisha.
“In this context it has to be understood that the story about King Vijaya, his birth, his parents and origin inform the readers of Mahavamsa that the parents of King Vijaya, that is his Father and Mother were actually Brother and Sister (sic).
Both of them were born to a Lion and a lady of Kalinga. This is the obnoxious story of the said Vijaya.”
Vaiko also charged that the Lankan high commissioner had violated “the diplomatic immunity, crossed his legal limits and circulated the most atrocious narrative to pour venom, poison in the minds of the people of India in the Northern states making a mention of linkage of Sinhala language with Sanskrit and Hindi.”

An “Un-Common” Candidate For Presidency And Another “Sinhala” Constitution

By Kusal Perera -April 6, 2013 |
Kusal Perera
Colombo Telegraph“If the present Government does not so agree, abolition should be the first priority of a candidate who is willing to abolish the Executive Presidency. Such a candidate should commit him/herself to a draft constitutional amendment, which will in effect be the election manifesto. Such candidate will request the people for a mandate to abolish the Executive Presidency.”- “Suggestions for Immediate Constitutional Reform” – NMJS , made public on 04 April at a media briefing,  presided by Ven. Maduluwawe SobhithaThera
When will the next presidential elections come ? The last was in January, 2010. But President Rajapaksa was not sworn in immediately after elections as in 2005 November. His Excellency had the privilege of swearing in this second time, on the day he thought he should. The interpretation for the date of swearing in, came accordingly. He was sworn in for his Second Term in November, 2010, almost ten (10) months after he was elected.
The law of the land says, next presidential election can only be held 04 years after the previous presidential election. From when would this 04 years begin ? Will it start ticking from end January 2010, or from 19 November, 2010 ? The calculation or the interpretation by the Supreme Court (SC) would definitely tally with the date the Rajapaksas feel is best for them. It could be 2014 January, if the Rajapaksa’s popularity run gets harder to sustain, or it could be 01 year and 07 months after this Sinhala-Hindu New Year. That also depends on what’s up their sleeve in winning a Third Term. Or, as it now goes, a simple amendment to the Constitution, interpreted as valid by the SC, could postpone elections by a full term.
Meanwhile, there is a hurried proposal to scrap the “Executive Presidency” from the “National Movement for a Just Society” (NMJS) that has Ven. Maduluwawe Sobhitha Thera, more as its Sinhala Buddhist gravitational centre than its “Convenor”. The title of the proposal says, “Suggestions for Immediate Constitutional Reform”. The Malwathu Shyamopali Siyam nikaye (sect) chief prelate, Most Ven. Tibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha Sumangala Mahanayaka Thera was the first to officially receive this proposal from MNJS. The Most Ven. monk was quoted in the media as having said at the event, both the executive presidency and the proportional representative system do not suit Sri Lanka.
As for the abolition of the Executive Presidency, there is consensus with reluctance amongst political leaders and most vaguely within the city middle class. The rural voter and the Sinhala Buddhists may prefer to have the Executive Presidency if they can be assured, it would always be with an ardent Buddhist fan, who would also be a staunch Sinhala campaigner in the calibre of Rajapaksa. Even otherwise, the promise of abolishing the Executive Presidency and trashing it thereafter, had never been a serious political issue, so far. IF that was as serious and important as the NMJS wants to stress, neither Chandrika Kumaratunge nor Mahinda Rajapaksa would have had the fortune of reneging on the promise and then getting elected for the second term too.
Within middle class political debates, abolishing of the Executive Presidency has gained some currency over the possibility of having an Executive Presidency made accountable and answerable to the people, through Constitutional provisions. The call for abolishing of the Executive Presidency has also ignored the fact, the parliamentary system of governance in Sri Lanka was a total failure. Sobhitha Thera’s proposal that had in its deliberations if not in drafting, Constitutional Experts and former Presidential Advisers in the calibre of men like Dr. Jayampathy Wickramaratne PC, opens up with the statement, “The Executive Presidency (EP) shall be immediately and totally abolished with a return to a Parliamentary form of Government.”
Now what is this Parliamentary form of Government ? We had two such pure forms from independence in 1948 to 1978. The first, was with a bi-cameral parliament explained as one that had a “Senate” as a safety mechanism for the Minorities, while the Constitution itself was having safety clauses for minorities under Article 29. What happened in that parliament ? That parliament disfranchised and made the Indian origin Tamils, “Stateless bonded labour” in the plantations. Made “Sinhala” in 1956, the ONLY official language of all people with total disregard of minority Tamils, Muslims and Burghers.
The second form of parliamentary government under a Republican Constitution in 1972, removed all minority safety mechanisms, smudged out the multi ethnic presence in society by Constitutionally saying all are “Sri Lankans”, made Buddhism the State religion, politicised the State including the Judiciary and in 1974, allowed for standardisation of university admission leading to ethnic discrimination. These two forms of parliamentary governance (without an Executive President), thus paved the way for militarising and brutalising of the ethnic conflict, leading to the catastrophe the country is now living with.
Nor did these two forms of parliamentary governance create any decent, socio economic development in this country. It was a proven case of decline, year in year out of economic growth too. An election parade that brought one government after the other, each faring far worse than the previous rule. That, the failure of parliamentary form of rule in fact gave J.R. Jayawardne the excuse and the reason to shift to an Executive Presidency, is now comfortably forgotten.
That therefore demands an answer from NMJS and those who propose a reversal to a parliamentary form of government, to the question, “WHY should Tamils in Sri Lanka accept a parliamentary form of government, once again ? What is there for them in a parliament that paved the way for the brutalised conflict ?”
There could have been much for the Tamils living in SL to engage in, if those who propose this abolition of the Executive Presidency and getting back to a parliamentary form of government, actually wanted to include provisions the Tamils have been asking for decades. The APRC Final Report on the other hand, has plenty of provisions for Tamils, Muslims and any other minority people living here. It has proposed a bi-cameral parliament too, with clearly demarcated areas of power sharing within provincial structures that provides North-East citizens their place in decision making on socio cultural and economic life as in Tamil Nadu. It proposed another elected structure for the Tamils of Indian origin and the Muslims, outside the East to intervene on issues related to their cultural identity. This parliament, the NMJS led by experts and Ven. Sobhitha thera proposes, has nothing for Tamils and nothing for any minority.
This NMJS proposal for “immediate constitutional reforms” in its entirety, is an adaptation of the 1972 Republican Constitution. One that goes back from where we are now, though the abolition of the Executive Presidency is projected as the biggest achievement ever, if possible. While it has no mention or proposal on power sharing and have completely ignored the PCs, though accepted as not at all adequate, nevertheless a governing structure meant for the provinces, the proposal discounts plurality of SL and wants ethnic recognition to be once again smudged out as in the 1972 Republican Constitution. The stress again is in establishing a common “Sri Lankan” identity.
“(3) The peoples of Sri Lanka who together constitute the People of Sri Lanka have the right to develop their own language, protect their own religion, to develop and promote their culture, to preserve their history and the right to their due share of State power including the right to due representation in institutions of government, without in any way weakening the common Sri Lankan identity. This shall not in any way be construed as authorizing or encouraging any action which would dismember or impair, totally or in part, the territorial integrity or political unity of the Republic.(emphasis added)”
Everything else that precedes this “common Sri Lankan identity” and most importantly, the last sentence which concludes the para quoted, in this present proposal was there in the 1972 Constitution as well. The 1972 Constitution under 16(2)a, d, g, 16(4), 16(6), 16(7) and 16(9) talks of everything this quoted para (3) has. This “common Sri Lankan identity is only an escape route for those who do not wish to have their Sinhala chauvinism, exposed.
A “common Sri Lankan identity” here in this Sri Lanka, can only be one dominated by Sinhala culture, Sinhala values, the Sinhala heritage and identity that all extremist Sinhala elements keep harping on. There can not be a “common” culture with equal space for other cultures and identities. The only commonality can be within the social acceptance for a Sinhala, Tamil or Muslim person to be both a Sri Lankan citizen and a Sinhala, Tamil or a Muslim person at the same time. A multi cultural, multi linguistic, multi ethnic, multi religious Sri Lanka, accepted without doubts and with respect in social thinking and accordingly reflected in its Constitution can be the only sustainable provision for peaceful co-existence. The National Movement for a “Just Society” refuses to accept that logic in its proposal for Constitutional Reform.
Therefore a constitutional reform proposal that
1.does not accept plurality of this country,
2.ignores the most important political necessity of power sharing for that plurality to enjoy democratic life in a single country,
3.does not accept the failures and drawbacks of our own experience in parliamentary form of government,
4.does not wish to have the APRC Final Report as its basis for discussion
should have other political reasoning and objectives to surface at this time of our political complexities and crises.
The most plausible of all political reasoning for such an “alibi for Sinhala chauvinism”, is the inability of mainstream political Opposition leaderships and their political organisations to present a viable political alternative that can politically challenge this Rajapaksa regime now, and immediately. Therefore the marginalised political elements from stubborn Sinhala nationalist urban middle class and the present day illogical “left” left overs, continuing with their anti – UNP ancestry, along with the hard line anti – Rajapaksa purists, have come together to propose a platform they think could out manoeuvre the main UNP opposition. A platform they feel could attract the Southern Sinhala constituency, better than the UNP that could have a possible tie up with the TNA, at an election.
The first ceremonial visit to the hill country to inform of this proposed abolition of the Executive Presidency to those considered the custodian of Sinhala Buddhists in Sri Lanka, strips the democratic dressing of the NMJS slogan and exposes its Sinhala nudity. It is no surprise, though. While Sinhala chauvinists wants such camouflage, the traditional “left” had always compromised with Sinhala chauvinism to promote “anti imperialism and anti UNP” platforms and brought about the most vulgarised regimes in post independent Ceylon and Sri Lanka. This simply is an attempt to keep to “tradition”.

There has been no political interference: AG

SATURDAY, 06 APRIL 2013
Dismissing allegations of political interference in granting bail and releasing suspects in high profile cases, Attorney General Palitha Fernando said there had not been a single instance of political interference and that the AG’s department was only acting on “the evidence, not on suspicion or assumption”.

With reference to the recent court decisions based on the advice of the AG regarding the suspects in the Kahawatha killing, the Hasitha Madawala killing and the acquittal of Malaka Silva and Rehan Fernando, he said that in all instances the officials of the department were guided by the evidence presented.

Referring to the release of one of the accused of the Kotakethenna double killing, the AG said there was no political pressure and that the son of the Pradeshiya Sabha member was convicted on charges of carrying narcotics.

“It is the Police who investigate the cases and we act on what is presented to us. In the case of Dharmasiri it was clear that there was no evidence to connect him to the killing. He was in Dondra on the day of the killing and there was suspicion because he was reportedly not in good terms with the two females who were killed after his son was arrested for carrying narcotics and the accused are this person’s brother and sister-in-law. If there is political connection how could this be,” he asked.

Mr. Fernando said a special prosecutor would be appointed since the department had necessary evidence to indict the two who were accused of the killings.

He said the Minister Mervyn Silva’s two secretaries turned crown witnesses and were granted bail theyhad no connection to the crime.

“All they were accused of was providing shelter and guarding the accused after he confessed to the killing. Sri Lankan law does not recognize ‘abetment’ as an offence after committing a crime. It should either before or while the crime is being committed. What better evidence do we have other than the two people to whom the accused had confessed to? This was the rationale in making them state witnesses” he said.

Mr. Fernando said in the case of the acquittal of Malaka Silva and five others, the prosecution could only use the video evidence as corroborative evidence and in the absence of a witness, the case was not on good ground.

“Video evidence can only be used as corroborative evidence. For whatever reason if the injured party in a sworn affidavit tells court that there was no incident then there is nothing more that we can do because there are no witnesses. The evidence ordinance which we are governed by is very clear on this,” he said.

Mr. Fernando said each official in the department were guided by their conscience.

“We have a conscience; all of us are men of integrity. We don’t discharge a person on a call from a politician and I can say without an iota of doubt that there has never been any sort of interference into the work of our department,” he said and added that rumours to the effect that he had signed an undated letter of resignation were a fabrication.

“Never for a moment have I done so. I have been in this profession for 34 years and there is nothing more for me to achieve, therefore I will do my duty towards the public of the country with utmost dignity and perseverance” he said.(Hafeel Farisz)

BBS, Religious Fundamentalism, Barbarism And Democracy

By Hemantha Warnakulasuriya -April 6, 2013 
Hemantha Warnakulasuriya
Colombo TelegraphIn Ceylon, in the sixties, democracy was alive and kicking. The pre ’56 era produced an anglicised coterie of pukka sahibs aping the west. After the 1956 revolution, we became non-aligned but were now aping the communist block. Bandaranaike was a true democrat who ignored the venomous press, which was hell bent on destroying him politically. As an Oxonian, he knew the freedom of the press was sine quo non for the sustenance of a democratic society. He understood this and did not send goons or white vans after the journalists. The people were poor and less affluent but they enjoyed a greater freedom and were politically independent. The most important facet during the pre ‘56 era was that religion was considered a private matter. There were very few messiahs who preached that they could cure any illness through prayers to God, nor were there American missionaries and local pastors who said that prayer and only prayer could give the poor anything that they wanted. All Muslim women exposed their fair and lovely faces. Mrs. Gulamhussein, who married to a rich Muslim, was the fashion Guru and there was no Bodu Bala Sena roaming the streets and ordering the police to close down slaughter houses. We, in school, questioned our teacher, who taught Buddhism, about the fanciful story of Lord Sakara drawing a picture of a Hare on the moon. This freedom was such that the generation born after 1977 could hardly understand it.
One of the most important aspects of the freedom, was the freedom of speech. The freedom extended to discuss religious beliefs. There were no blasphemous laws or punishment for criticising religious beliefs. There was no Bodu Bala Sena or Hindu Rastriya Swayangsevak Sangha or Al Qaeda or Taliban. Jihad was unknown. Bible Societies and other fundamental Christian Churches were not in vogue as today. Religion was a private affair. Today, on every single TV and radio channel Bana is being preached by Sangha Super Stars. This was quite contrary to the Bana that was being preached in the sixties. The learned monks then dwelt with the most complex Buddhist tenets found in the Abhidamma.
Yet, students were not constrained or prohibited from arguing for and against the religious beliefs. At that time most people were taking the left or the middle path and the Marxist parties were very much in the forefront of the anti-imperialist struggle. The freedom to discuss and criticise religion was a freedom that we all had. Most of my friends were Marxists and attached dogmatic reverence to the teachings of Karl Marx whose centrist theory was the saying that Religion was the opiate of the masses. Politicians of the calibre of Dr. S.A. WickramasinghePieter Keuneman, Dr. N.M. Perera and Dr. Colvin R. de Silva practiced the principals of Marxism and were rarely seen offering flowers at temples or attending Church masses. Even if they did it was wholly a private affair. There was a large section of the masses who believed that the final emancipation of mankind could be achieved only through Communism and all other organisations and even State and its organs would wither away.They opined that Marxist Lenninism was scientific political philosophy and could not be challenged as it had been proved by adopting the scientific method and all other dogmas political philosophy cannot last long as they were built on false and anti-scientific theories, whereas dialectic materialism was scientific and a proven political philosophy.
Dr. Abraham Kovoor and Dr. Carlo Fonseka initiated the Rationalist Movement in Sri Lanka. This movement openly criticised the religious beliefs prevalent in Sri Lanka and would openly criticise the institutions and the mythology of all religions. Meetings were held at Thurstan College, where Dr. Kovoor taught. The hall was filled to capacity and many had to be under tamarind trees and in cadjan huts in Thurstan College premises. The press devoted pages to these meetings and Abraham Kovoor himself wrote extensively on his researches. There was no Fatwa issued against Dr. Kovoor or Dr. Carlo Fonseka. Calling on good Muslims to kill anyone critical of Islam. There was no Bodu Bala Sena to disrupt Kovoor’s meetings when he questioned the validity of rebirth and Karma. Freedom to express opinions against any religion was accepted. Mr. Kovoor never had any security guards around him though he constantly berated all religious beliefs in Sri Lanka. He was a folk hero amongst young radical and intelligent youth who firmly believed in what Kovoor and other said. Some believed that religion was creation of the adults to keep young men in bondage and a conspiracy to hoodwink and cheat them to prevent their quest for knowledge and their search for the truth.
There were four main religions and Communism, which was against all religions, had taken a firm root in the minds of the youth. They argued that Religion retarded development progress and science. There was also a very strong movement against imperialism, racism and capitalism as opposed to communism and communist brotherhood. In small countries like Sri Lanka people were more sandwiched between the two major powers, one striving to build a religious empire and the other to build and Atheist and agnostic empire.
The people, in spite of their upbringing and conservative and religious backgrounds were ready to relinquish their beliefs based on superstitions and tradition to socialism based upon science.
I was firmly opposed to communism as my parents came from a fairly affluent background and as a youth, I found many arguments to support my parents convictions on whether it was politics or religion and their thinking.
When the mighty United Socialist Soviet Republic (USSR) collapsed, I remember being elated and the collapse of the Berlin Wall drove the final nail into the communist coffin. I was taught ,and believed that Communism was all evil as I was convinced that any political philosophy which alienates a person from Buddhism and the great teachings of Lord Buddha was the philosophy of the devil. USSR was an evil empire.
But today in hindsight, I feel sorry that the Communist Empire crumbled as we have become more and more fundamentalistic, chauvinist and our political thinking and philosophies are driven by race and religion. Today I hear no one criticising the teachings of Lord Buddha. Every single person I come across blindly follows their religion, be it Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism or Islam. There is no room for an independent thinker who thinks independently on which is right and wrong in what you believe in.
Then there is no Ayatollah Khomeni to issue Fatwa, our parents, elders, teachers and religious clergy, whether monks, priests and mullahas believe in what they pronounce without any independent thinking on whether what they say are true or otherwise. I feel that with the disappearance of the Soviet Republic the fundamental medieval beliefs are descending upon us. The dark gloomy clouds are descending upon and engulfing us. We are gradually receding to the dark ages of religious fundamentalism which is the most retrogating force against human civilisation, scientific advancement and democratic ideals and the pursuit of happiness. I could see no force that would stop this avalanche of religious bigotry and liberate us and our children from this pernicious beliefs. The scientific theories would give way to the message of God. We are doomed. The renaissance would recede like the initial wave of the Tsunami. The final onslaught would be so devastating that we will be mowed down by the most ambitious religious power in the world.
But We have the only silver lining that would stop our descent to religious fundamentalism or barbarism. Even in another 50 years the largest population in the world would be the Chinese. China is a communist country where pig-eating is staple. Chinese, will believe that religion is the opiate of the masses. The Chinese call their country the Middle Kingdom and it will finally prevent and stop these forces of retrogation from engulfing the world. The Chinese will not permit paedophilia and will respect a woman and she would have the same rights as a man.
No child would be married as an infant, in case the husband dies the child will not be widowed for life. Neither would you permit man to marry more than once without divorcing. You could be convicted and shot if you rape your own infant daughter and there is no law to pay blood money after doing so. The most fundamental aspect of civilisation is the manner in which the people treat their women and children. In communism the most important teaching is equality of women and the treatment of children. Ultimately when the whole world succumbs to religious fanaticism, the Chinese communist party if it remains so, would be the greatest bulwark against religious oppression.

In the UNHRC voting at Geneva, it was a win for Sri Lanka

   By  Sam Rajappa
  
06 Apr 2013
Posted 05-Apr-2013
Vol 4 Issue 14
The 21 March UN Human Rights Council vote was a victory for Sri Lanka since the US sponsored, India supported resolution did not call the human rights violation as State sponsored.

Last year’s resolution as well as this year’s resolution calls for implementation of the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission.
The UNRC resolution disappointed the global Tamils who rallied for an independent investigation into Sri Lankan war crimes
Eelam Tamils consider it a mockery of justice as President Mahinda Rajapaksa is both the culprit and the judge. The LLRC report provides a dangerous blueprint for structural and cultural genocide of Sri Lankan Tamils.

It categorically denies the existence of a historical Tamil homeland comprising the Northern and the Eastern Provinces and insists that by 2020 no district or Province in the island nation can be categorised on the basis of language.

The UNHRC meeting in Geneva gave an opportunity to policy-makers in New Delhi to promote sustainable peace and political settlement of the Tamil problem in Sri Lanka.

Instead, India engaged in behind-the-scenes diplomacy to tone down the US-sponsored resolution to make it almost meaningless for the Tamils and voted for it, incurring the displeasure of Rajapaksa.

There is no mention of “an independent and credible international investigation” as mandated by the report of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Expression of concern over the failure of devolution of powers is missing in the final draft of the resolution. The word genocide is conspicuous by its absence.

According to the UN, “Any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and forcibly transferring children of the group to another group,” constitute genocide.

Why is India reluctant to call the Sri Lankan pogrom genocidal?

Pakistan, on the other hand, went all out mobilising the Islamic member-nations to oppose the resolution.

Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan foreign minister, directed Zamir Akram, her country’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, to arrange for meetings of diplomats from the Organisation for Islamic Cooperation and likeminded groups and lobby for Sri Lanka.

Except for Libya and Sierra Leone, all OIC members voted against the resolution, taking the tally of negative votes to a respectable 13 with nine abstentions.

Their support for Sri Lanka was despite lobbying by the US diplomats on issues Muslims in the island nation were facing from the Bodhu Bala Sena (BBS) and inclusion of a line to the resolution expressing concern on “discrimination on the basis of religion or belief.”

BBS has been spreading anti-Muslim rhetoric and recently forced the abolishment of Halal certification. Now they want to change how Muslim women in Sri Lanka dress.

Only 25 nations, including India, voted for the resolution in the Human Rights Council made up of 47 nations with voting rights.

Pakistan’s foreign secretary Jalil Abbas is visiting Colombo on 4 April to carry forward the relationship between the two countries. He will call on, among others, President Rajapaksa while in Colombo.

Sri Lanka will no doubt appreciate Pakistan’s newfound friendship and China’s steadfast support and the two countries will move closer to Colombo and fill the vacuum left behind by India.

China has just completed Sri Lanka’s second international airport at Mattala, funded by China’s Export-Import Bank. It can accommodate Airbus A380, the biggest airliner in service, and is surrounded by a free trade zone.

When India voted against Sri Lanka at last year’s Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh bent over backwards to please Rajapaksa by saying, “Your Excellency would be aware that we spared no effort and were successful in introducing an element of balance (euphemism for watering down) in the language of the resolution.”

External affairs minister Salman Kurshid suggested this time, as if to atone for past sins, that the US and Sri Lanka should directly engage on the draft resolution and “aim for a mutually acceptable outcome.”

The resolution put to vote suggests that the dialogue between the two has been fruitful and a deal has been struck.

India is unwilling to accept that the Northern and the Eastern Provinces of Sri Lanka is the traditional homeland of Tamils notwithstanding the Indo-Sri Lanka Agreement of 1987 Rajiv Gandhi entered into with JR Jayawardene and committed Indian Peace Keeping Force to implement it in which more 1,300 of our soldiers were killed and thousands maimed for life.

The UPA government lacks the political will or conviction to find a solution to the ethnic crisis or seek justice for the aggrieved. Carrying the diktats of the Geneva resolution will only annihilate the genuine aspirations and right to self-determination of the Tamils in the island nation.

The agenda of the Rajapaksa regime is to buy time to complete Sinhalisation of the Northern and the Eastern Provinces and destroy the existence of the Tamil people in the island nation.

Every State has a responsibility to protect its citizen from mass atrocities like genocide, ethnic cleansing, war crimes and crimes against humanity, and the international community has a responsibility to assist and build capacity of those States that are unable to protect.

The R2P doctrine has grown from the troubled conscience of the international community after the Rwandan genocide and the Srebrenica massacre in the 1990s. World leaders agreed to the principle of R2P in the World Summit Outcome Document in 2005.

The R2P doctrine suffered a huge blow in May 2009 when the international community watched over grave abuses being inflicted on the Tamil people in Sri Lanka.

The default response of the international community can be coercive military measures if genuine efforts at pacific settlement have failed. The doctrine will become a dead letter in international law unless used in appropriate cases in a timely manner in the interest of oppressed people.

The 2012 Geneva resolution gave the government of Sri Lanka time to pursue its agenda of Sinhalisation of the North-East. This year’s resolution, again insisting on a local process, will give further time to complete agenda.
Tamils protesting in Geneva during the UNHRC session demanding action against the genocidal Sri Lankan regime
If the intention of the international community is to alleviate the post-war sufferings of the Tamil people, it is time for the UNHRC to invoke the R2P doctrine and call for a transitional interim administration for the Northern and the Eastern Provinces, as the government of Sri Lanka has failed to protect a section of its citizens.

Such an idea has been explored before during the 2002-2005 peace process and in the post-Tsunami context.

If anybody thought Sri Lanka would mend its ways after the Human Rights Council resolution, they are mistaken. Even as the 22nd session of the Council was discussing the resolution, people in the Tamil district of Mullaitivu were asked to hand over private lands to make way for a new army camp.

It shows the scant regard of the authorities to the reconciliation process. With the impeachment of Chief Justice Shirani Bandarayake and the appointment of Mohan Pieris, as CJ, a vigorous defender of the government’s conduct of the war, the prospects of accountability through a local process have become nil.

Had Shirani continued as Chief Justice, it would not have been easy for the Rajapaksa regime to usurp powers of the Provinces, particularly the Tamil majority North and East.

The UN Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts report contains the best of recommendations on accountability and way forward in Sri Lanka. It should be heeded by the international community concerned about the plight of Eelam Tamils.

Sam Rajappa is Consulting Editor of The Weekend Leader