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

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Their religion may stress peace, but some Buddhists are showing that they’re entirely capable of violence in the name of faith.

Foreign Policy Magazine

APRIL 23, 2013


The man's body lies on a blanket striped in white and blue. He's wearing a dark brown tank top and a dark blue flowered sarong. Someone has tied his hands behind his back with rope. There are deep red gashes on his head and shoulders -- some of them presumably the wounds that ended his life. 
The man in the photo is a Muslim. The people who killed him were almost certainly Buddhists. He was a victim in last fall's sectarian bloodshed in western Burma, which pitted members of the two religions against each other. The image comes from a new report by Human Rights Watch that carefully documents the violence that took some 200 lives and resulted in the forced displacement of some 125,000 people. (A more recent wave of violence within the past few weeks has taken some 40 additional lives and triggered another surge of refugees.) The report argues persuasively that state institutions, including the police, often stood by while Buddhist rioters went after their Muslim neighbors -- and in some cases may have even helped to organize the attacks. A mere 4 percent of Burma's population of Burma is Muslim, while well over 90 percent are Buddhists. Perhaps the fact that the government sided with the majority probably shouldn't have come as a surprise. (The allegations didn't stop the International Crisis Group, a leading western humanitarian organization, from giving an award to President Thein Sein earlier this week.) 
But wait: Isn't Buddhism a religion that places respect for life and the embrace of peace at the very center of its worldview? The Buddha himself placed compassion at the root of his teachings, and in Burma itself, it was Buddhist monks who setthe rigorously non-violent tone of the massive anti-government demonstrations back in 2007. The chants of the saffron-robed protestors were powerfully moving: "May all beings living to the East be free; all beings in the universe be free, free from fear, free from all distress!" 
It turns out, sadly, that some Buddhist monks don't see this as a binding ethical imperative. Monks have been prominent among those inciting the recent bloodshed. The most notable is U Wirathu, a monk at a prominent monastery who's made a name for himself lately as an apologist for anti-Muslim sentiment and the organizer of the "969" movement, which has been issuing stickers and signs emblazoned with that number (which has symbolic significance for Burmese Buddhists) to identify businesses that refuse to serve Muslims -- exactly the kind of policy the monk is aiming to promote. He's said to have referred to himself as "the Buddhist Osama bin Laden." How can this sort of bigotry possibly be reconciled with the teachings of the Enlightened One? 
I'm happy to say that there are plenty of other Buddhist monks in Burma who have been pushing back against their chauvinist colleagues. But to understand what's been happening, we also need to take a closer look at those who claim to be standing up for Buddhism even as they've doing things that don't seem to be easily reconcilable with their religion. 
First of all, the notion of Buddhism as an inherently pacifist religion has a strong element of Western oversimplification. Buddhist teaching has never prohibited believers from fighting in defense of a just cause. As the scholars Michael Jerryson and Mark Juergensmeyer show in their book Buddhist Warfare, Buddhists have participated in wars ever since their faith came into being. Militant monks have fought for Chinese rulers (and against them) for centuries. Japan's samurai warriors were ardent Buddhists, men who cited the Buddha's teachings on the impermanence of physical existence as a good argument for soldiering. 

ATTACKS ON SRI LANKAN MONKS WERE ISOLATED INCIDENTS - INDIAN ENVOY

April 25, 2013 

Attacks on Sri Lankan monks were isolated incidents - Indian envoy
Indian High Commissioner, Ashok K. Kantha calling on Mahanayake Thero of Asgiriya Chapter Udugama Sri Buddharakkhita.



India has said that the recent attacks on Sri Lankan Buddhist monks in Tamil Nadu were isolated incidents and did not reflect the strong people-to-people bonds.

“These were isolated incidents and did not reflect the strong people-to-people bonds that have been an integral part of the close historical, cultural and civilisational ties between the India and Sri Lanka,” Indian High Commissioner in Colombo Ashok K. Kantha has said.

He was making farewell calls on the two Buddhist high priests located in the Central town of Kandy yesterday.

The attacks on two Buddhist monks triggered protests in Colombo which even caused the wrath on Sri Lankan cricketers playing in the IPL.

The protesters urged the cricketers to boycott IPL.

The Indian envoy told the two high priests that “the state government of Tamil Nadu had taken immediate action to identify and prosecute the miscreants responsible for these incidents and that the Government of India, in consultation with the concerned state governments, had taken and would continue to take all possible measures to ensure the safety, security and well-being of Sri Lankan visitors to India, including to Tamil Nadu.” 

Kantha’s remarks came just days after Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa had said that Sri Lanka and India continued to enjoy good relations despite the rumblings in Tamil Nadu. - PTI

Arrested for selling flowers

Nine people including seven women were arrested while selling flowers illegally along the pavement near the Kalutara Bodhiya today, Police said.

They said separate places had been assigned for flower stalls and those engaged in selling flowers out side were arrested to avoid the inconveniences to devotees.

Meanwhile the flower sellers said they had been selling flowers in the area for several years and it was how they made a living. (Sarath Siriwardana)





SSP JAYAKODY UNFAZED BY DEATH THREAT
SSP Jayakody unfazed by death threat


April 25, 2013

Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) in charge of Ratnapura Division, Prishantha Jayakody who had received a threatening phone call, which was traced back to a payphone booth in Galle, says he remains unbowed and unafraid.  

The former Police Spokesman said the threat against his life and his family’s was made following a raid on a karaoke bar operating in Ratnapura last Saturday and therefore suspects a connection between the bar and the threat call.

Jayakody said he suspects that certain higher-ups are connected to the karaoke bar in question.

It has been reported that the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) has launched investigations into the death threat

Two PCs, Vice Chairman hospitalised


THURSDAY, 25 APRIL 2013
Two policemen and the Buttala Pradeshiya Sabha Vice Chairman were hospitalised after they were injured in an attack last night in Buttala, police said.

The police personnel are alleged to have been attacked by some of the occupants who were in the Vice Chairman’s vehicle which had sped away after ignoring a police order to stop.

The vehicle was later stopped and it was when the two police men were reportedly searching the vehicle that they were attacked.

MINISTERS BLAMING EACH OTHER, BUT NOT THE PRESIDENT

April 25, 2013 
Ministers blaming each other, but not the PresidentMinisters Champika Ranawaka and Pavithra Wanniarachchi are taking turns at blaming one another, however no one is blaming the President for the recent hike in the electricity tariff, an anti-corruption group said today. 

President Mahinda Rajapaksa will “earn marks” by declaring on Workers’ Day (May 01) electricity concessions for the masses, Dr Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri said, addressing a press briefing by the Organization Against Corruption in Colombo.

There is no need to tell the people separately about the electricity tariff as they are already aware of the situation, the FUTA president said.

 President of the Private Bus Owners’ Association, Gemunu Wijeratne who also expressed his views at the briefing, which was attended by several trade union representatives, stated that a husband at home usually lovingly gazes as his wife, but now he only looks at the electricity meter.

He no longer has time to look at his wife because he is too busy looking at the electricity meter, refrigerator and other electrical items, Wijeratne said.

A certain group which recently surfaced claiming to be saviors of the race and religion have nothing to say increase in electricity tariffs, said Sanjeewa Bandara, Convener of the Inter University Students Federation.

A total of 4 ministers are in charge of Power and Energy, however it’s of no use as the pressure is on the people, he said addressing press conference.  

The Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) President, Dr Dewasiri further charged that the government is wasting the public’s money on advertising the Matttala Airport and that such advertising is unnecessary. 

THURSDAY, 25 APRIL 2013 logo
Masses are extending their support for the 'torch light' demonstrations carried out by the JVP demanding the government to withdraw the unfair electricity tariff hike.
A 'torch light' demonstration was held in Galle town yesterday (24th) as part of the campaign organized to be held throughout the island. While the demonstrators with torches marched to the town the shop owners extended their support by putting off lights in their establishments.
When the demonstration commenced lights at the bus stand and streets around too had been switched off.

Sri Lankan corporate profits soar as workers face poverty

By Saman Gunadasa 
25 April 2013
Profit results published by Sri Lanka’s corporate sector for the financial year that ended in March 2013 demonstrate that a handful of big businesses are pocketing the country’s wealth while the working people are being forced to bear stringent austerity measures.
According to the recently published NDB Stock Brokers report, profits soared in plantations (up 375 percent); healthcare (153 percent); power and energy (81 percent); banking and finance (40 percent); hotel and travel (28 percent); beverages, food and tobacco (18 percent); and telecommunications (7 percent).
The brutal exploitation of workers’ labour power is most starkly revealed in the plantation sector. While company profits rose nearly four-fold, plantation workers remained among the lowest paid in Sri Lanka.
Under a secret wage deal struck this month between the unions and management, behind the backs of the plantation workers, the daily wage was increased by only 70 rupees (55 US cents), frozen for two years and subjected to increased productivity quotas.
Yet, during the final quarter of the financial year alone, Horana Plantations Plc almost trebled its profits to 100 million rupees, while Bogawantalawa Tea Estates Plc’s gross profits surged more than five-fold to 170 million rupees. A substantial devaluation of the rupee, dictated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and stronger international tea prices were the main factors boosting plantation profits.
Health sector profits grew because increasing numbers of patients were compelled to go to private hospitals, often forcing them to exhaust their savings and sell off any property. That is because the Sri Lankan government has drastically run down the free health care system.
Similarly, the private generating companies that sell power to the government-owned Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) are reaping huge profits at the expense of the CEB, which posts large losses and depends on treasury funds. In order to implement the IMF’s demand to reduce the budget deficit, the government has increased household electricity bills by a staggering 68 percent. But it government has no intention of touching the profits of the private electricity producers.
Overall, corporate profits rose by an average of 10 percent during the financial year. The NDB report stated: “Total profits of the sample set of 93 companies, considered to represent the market, which contribute 77 percent of total market capitalisation of the stock market, increased by 10 percent year-on-year.”
The stock market itself is manipulated by those sections of the business and financial elite backed by the government, so that big investors make huge profits at the expense of small investors. Workers’ pension funds and the deposits held by state banks are used for these purposes.
The banking sector has become one of the most profitable industries. The Central Bank Report for 2012 stated: “The banking sector reported a higher profit after tax of 82 billion rupees for 2012 when compared with the profit after tax of 66 billion rupees reported in 2011.”
Local banks, the Sampath Bank and Union Bank, reported more than 50 percent increases in profits, up to 5 billion and half a billion rupees respectively. Likewise, net profits of insurance companies Ceylinco Insurance and Union Assurance rose by 24 percent and 33 percent, up to 1.65 billion and 921 million rupees, respectively.
Bank profits were mainly generated by lending at high interest rates while depositors were kept on low interest rates. As well, banks gained from the devaluation of the rupee.
The predatory interest rates of the banks have impacted severely on businesses. Sri Lanka Chamber of Small and Medium Industries president Aloy Jayewardena recently reported that about a quarter of the country’s smaller enterprises had collapsed over the past two to three years “amid gruelling financial hardships, including bank interest rates on loans, which have soared to 18 percent.”
President Mahinda Rajapakse’s government has also helped boost profits by keeping the maximum corporate tax rate at just 28 percent. At the same time, Rajapakse, who is also finance minister, has imposed new burdens on working people through a tight wage freeze, subsidy cuts and increased taxes on basic food items, energy and other essentials.
The living conditions of the working class are deteriorating day by day. In a report released last November, the Central Bank warned the government not to increase wages without so-called productivity improvements, because that would lead to “wage induced inflationary pressures.” Productivity improvement refers to intensifying the exploitation of workers through extended working hours, greater speedups and heavier workloads.
Social inequality is becoming more glaring. Addressing a recent seminar, economics professor A.V. De S. Indraratne said: “Sri Lanka is a $US60 billion small economy with 20 million people, with a per capita money income of $US2,920, but 2/5 or 40 percent of this population having only a quarter of this amount as their per capita income, in other words, living on less than $US2 a day.”
The latest official Household Income and Expenditure Survey showed that in 2009-10, the poorest 20 percent of the population received only 4.5 percent of the total household income, while the richest 20 percent received 54.1 percent. The survey pointed out that almost half of the income of average households was spent on food.
According to this survey, the minimum monthly income needed to provide for a family of four would be 32,000 rupees ($US252). Even though this figure failed to take into account the soaring cost of living, most working class households are struggling to survive on less than half this amount. As a result, workers are undertaking longer working hours, sacrificing holidays and working at breakneck speeds.
The government’s national poverty line for March 2013 was 3,659 rupees per month, or 121 rupees (95 US cents) a day, which is hardly sufficient to buy a packet of rice meal for a single person. Even by this measure, close to two million people live in such grinding poverty.

No use for an election commission – President

logoTUESDAY, 23 APRIL 2013 
An election commission was not necessary as the functions of the Commissioner of Electricians is quite adequate says President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
The President said this in response to a question posed by a journalist at the monthly meeting of media heads held at Temple Trees yesterday (22nd). The journalist asked whether the elections commission would be established before the election to the Northern Provincial Councils is held.
The President said the election to the Northern PC would be definitely held in September and emphasized that there was no reason to postpone it.

Politics of power at play!


By Ashwin Hemmathagama-April 25, 2013
Our Lobby Correspondent
Parliament was in uproar for the second consecutive day yesterday, with the Opposition lighting candles in the Chamber and climbing on tables to protest against a Government decision to raise electricity tariffs, forcing the Deputy Speaker to suspend sittings for several minutes.
UNP MPs walked into the Chamber yesterday holding candles and proceeded to stage a demonstration against the electricity price hikes. The demonstration drew an angry reaction from Government benches, which hurled water bottles at the Opposition MPs, causing Deputy Speaker Chandima Weerakoddy to suspend sittings for several minutes and force the Opposition MPs to put out their candles.
Despite the uproarious scenes that continued throughout the sittings, with DNA MPs Vijitha Herath and Sunil Handunetti standing on tables in protest, the Government passed four bills and six regulations scheduled to be taken up yesterday. The Deputy Speaker then adjourned sittings till 7 May.
Parliament reconvened at 1 p.m. yesterday following Tuesday’s chaotic scenes over the electricity tariffs that forced Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa to suspend sittings for a day. After the announcements made at the commencement of business, the Minister of Environment and Renewable Energy moved the Mines and Minerals (Amendment) followed by three general motions moved by the Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources Management and the Leader of the House of Parliament Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva.
Politics of…
The Opposition continued to disrupt proceedings with the UNP raising issues regarding the Standing Orders and a violation of the constitution by Minister of Power and Energy Pavithra Wanniarachchi in her recent speech.
Both Deputy Speaker Weerakkody and Leader of the House Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva disagreed but asked the Opposition to request a debate during the next session.

A Walk In ‘American Shoes’


By Malinda Seneviratne -April 25, 2013 
Malinda Seneviratne
Colombo TelegraphEvery culture has its own repositories of wisdom, embedded in sacred text or even in folk lore. Every culture has idioms and fables that are prescriptive or at least of a nature that calls for deep reflection.
There’s a proverb sourced to the Cherokee tribe of Native Americans, given life by Harper Lee’s celebrated novel ‘To Kill a Mocking Bird’ that goes like this: ‘Don’t judge a man until you have walked a mile in his shoes’.
The world has been ‘globalized’ to such an extent that the human race is constantly forced to encounter difference, in people and ideas, political preferences and ideological bent, ethnic identity and religious persuasion. It is perhaps a sign of a fundamental species flaw that human tend to link ‘difference’ to ‘enmity’. We perceive difference first, commonality later (if at all). If first impressions count then this can be perhaps the main reason for intolerance, fear, hatred and violence.
Last week the United States of America was set ablaze; first in Boston and then in Texas (fertilizer plant). There was also a mysterious substance enclosed in an envelope sent to US President Barack Obama, rekindling anxieties first produced over a decade ago with the deadly Anthrax ‘posts’. The USA has known violence. Almost 3000 people died in the 9/11 attacks. The Oklahoma bomb (1994) killed 168. A year before, and exactly 20 years to the day before the Texas explosion (April 19) when 14 died, 76 men, women and children were killed in a standoff between the FBI and a Protestant Sect, Branch Davidians (breakaway group of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church) where the tactics used make US allegations regarding how Sri Lanka dealt with terrorists in rescuing over 200,000 hostages laughable.
Does the world understand the sorrow, horror and perhaps anger of the USA? Has the world walked the required distance in ‘American Shoes’ to fully empathize? Well, the rest of the world has had more than its fair share of Bostons, Oklahomas, Wacos and Twin Towers. Marathons too. Jeyaraj Fernandopulle, a minister was one of 14 victims of an LTTE bomb-attack at an Avurudu Marathon event. It can be safely said, then, that the US is now being forced to walk in non-US shoes. Not out of choice, of course.
What is ironic about all this is that some of those ‘non-US shoes’ were actually US-made or else US-marketed. It is no secret that Washington, as per ‘strategic needs’ (economic and military) has not just fuelled terrorism but indeed has manufactured dissent and violence, causing immeasurable harm to peoples all over the world.
The search for those responsible for the Boston Marathon bombings ended on Friday in a shootout where one of the suspects was killed and the other, his brother, injured and subsequently arrested. Boston came to a stop. Trains and buses didn’t run. Offices and schools were shut. Residents were advised to stay home with doors and windows locked. Compare this to Sri Lanka where for more than two decades a bomb explosion could be expected any second and one concludes that the USA is not ready to live with terrorism. It is not a ‘reality’ that anyone should wish on anyone else of course, but it does not hurt to suggest to the good people of that country to walk in the shoes of people from less fortunate countries.
If a couple of bombs saw the USA rush home and lock itself inside, Americans of that country can easily imagine why Sri Lanka, for example, is wary of anyone and anything associated with the LTTE, and why those who re-mouth the uttering of LTTE proxies, sympathizers, operatives and apologists are treated with suspicion. When one of the suspects was finally apprehended, there was cheering. No one called it ‘Triumphalism’, one notes. Having walked in the shoes that the US has been forced to wear, Sri Lanka understands.
President Obama said the attackers had chosen the wrong city to bomb. Is there a ‘right’ city, though? Will Obama at least now have the humility to wear those other shoes and walk the requisite distances? Will some of the empathy of the world rub off on the USA? Time will tell.
*Malinda Seneviratne is the Chief Editor of ‘The Nation’ and his articles can be found at www.malindawords.blogspot.com

America cannot assert moral authority while Guantánamo remains open

Editorial-Sunday 21 April 2013

The Observer homeFor those not charged with any offence, their long detention is a most serious stain on the human rights record of the US
The Guardian homeIn 2009, defending the promise he made to close Guantánamo Bay, President Barack Obama insisted: "The existence of Guantánamo likely created more terrorists around the world than it ever detained."
This weekend, the case for the closure of Guantánamo Bay, promised by Obama on his second day in office, has never been more compelling. A hunger strike by the camp's inmates, half of whom had been cleared for release, has underlined the growing desperation of those 166 still detained. Of that number, some 86 had been approved for transfer (while the rest had been earmarked for trial) but have become stuck in a political and legal limbo that has seen such transfers almost completely halted in the last two-and-a-half years. A recent report by a bipartisan panel of experts has condemned both the conditions there and the use of abusive interrogation techniques.
One of those trapped in this Kafkaesque nightmare is Briton Shaker Aamer. As the Observer reports today, despite a skeleton deal that could pave the way for his release to Saudi Arabia, Aamer rightly insists he should be allowed to return to the UK to rejoin his family.
After 11 years, it is hard to see the rationale for keeping Guantánamo open. It is a fundamental principle of open and democratic societies that those accused or suspected of serious crimes should be submitted to due legal process within a reasonable time period. Indefinite detention of those cleared of any crime, or if those authorities have insufficient evidence to prosecute, is a gross violation of human rights.
The US government's decision last month that Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, Osama bin Laden's son-in-law and an al-Qaida spokesman, should be tried in a federal court rather than before a military commission at Guantánamo has underlined the principle that domestic courts are the best place to try terrorism suspects. Indeed, as Human Rights Watch has pointed out, military commissions in Guantánamo have been proved unreliable, unable to deliver real justice and subject to changes in rules and bogged down in procedure.
For those who have not been charged with any offence, their long detention has come to be one of the most serious stains on the human rights record of the US, amounting to open-ended and indefinite incarceration without charge or due process. As David Ignatius argued compellingly in the Washington Post yesterday, there are strong arguments, too, for releasing and transferring Taliban detainees back to Afghanistan. The CIA's assessment is that even if those individuals returned to the battlefield, it would have no net impact on the military situation, while it might provide impetus in talks with the Taliban.
The reason that Guantánamo remains operational, and with so many stuck within it, has nothing to do with practical issues concerning release or transfer or how some should be tried. Instead, those trapped in Guantánamo are the victims of a political conflict, specifically between Congress and the White House over plans to house and try alleged terrorists in the US. Congress cut off funds to move accused men to the US for detention and insisted on onerous conditions for the transfer of those remaining out of the US, including elaborate arrangements for monitoring.
Obama too must be held responsible for this continuing disgrace. It was the president, after all, who signed into law the National Defence Authorisation Act, jeopardising his ability to close Guantánamo after threatening to veto it.
As Amnesty International and others have pointed out, despite the ban on US funds for transfers contained in the NDAA, another clause, Section 1028, does give Obama the broad right to resolve some cases – such as Shaker Aamer's – whose return has been requested by the UK government. The resolution of the Shaker Aamer case, as Amnesty argued earlier this year, would be a symbolic step that would demonstrate that Obama has not abandoned his commitment to close Guantánamo.
The well-documented deployment of sustained and abusive interrogation techniques, sexual humiliation and extreme violence in Guantánamo is something that demeans America. That an American president has allowed these depraved practices to continue on his watch is more shocking still. Until America closes Guantánamo Bay, it cannot, as it likes to, assert its moral authority over the rest of the world.
Refugees saved by UAE find new home in US

The National and -Apr 24, 2013 


DUBAI // Eleven Sri Lankan refugees have arrived in Los Angeles  to begin their new lives after receiving care in the UAE for six months.

“We can now lead a life without fear and don’t have to live as refugees any more,” said Sivabalan Niranjani, 35, of the harrowing journey that ended when she landed in Dubai. She arrived in the US with her husband and two children yesterday.

Mrs Niranjani was seven months pregnant when she and 44 others set sail from India by boat last October to seek asylum in Australia.

Five days later their boat broke down and they had to be rescued by the Singaporean ship Pinnacle Bliss, which was en route to Jebel Ali.

When the group arrived in Dubai on October 23, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) notified the UAE of their presence.

Although the Emirates is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and not legally obliged to allow refugees to stay, they were allowed to disembark and the UN agency was granted access to determine the legitimacy of their claims for asylum.

While waiting for asylum, Mrs Niranjani gave birth to a girl in December at Dubai’s Latifa Hospital.
“Our children will get a better life,” she said. “We want a life of peace and no war. We have been praying for this.”
Babar Baloch, a spokesman for UNHCR, said the refugees’ departure was arranged by the International Organisation for Migration.

“Authorities in the US will handle refugees that have been accepted for resettlement,” Mr Baloch said.
Of the 46 who arrived in Dubai, including Mrs Naranjani’s baby, seven were sent back by the UN as they were deemed not to be in need of international protection.

Eight were sent to Sweden and one went to the US earlier. After another 11 left for the US yesterday, 19 are left in the UAE to continue their wait.

Shanta Kansaropan, 35, was also among the US group. She said three of her children, her mother and her brother all died while trying to flee Sri Lanka for India in 2009.

“I hope God won’t test us again and will give us a good life finally,” Mrs Kansaropan said. “It is better for us to die than return to Sri Lanka. We are lucky for this new lease of life but sadly our children won’t be with us.”

Many of them had been living in India, which lacks refugee laws, for several years before trying to make it to Australia. Once they are in the US, they can apply for permanent residency after five years if they have committed no crimes.
Meanwhile, the 19 remaining say they will die if they are sent back to Sri Lanka.

“We don’t know when we can leave,” said Akaliniyan, who was using a pseudonym. “We hope this ordeal will end soon.
“If we go back to Sri Lanka, we will not remain alive. We don’t need any comforts or luxury. We are happy to live anywhere. But in our country, we will die every day.”

Mr Baloch said the UNHCR was continuing efforts to find long-term solutions for them outside the UAE.
“According to our staff, the refugees are being well looked after and are being attended by the UAE Red Crescent,” he said. “They receive three hot meals a day with full access to health care and sanitation facilities.”

Kulasegaram Geetharthanan, a lawyer with Jein Solicitors in the UK, has submitted asylum applications to several consulates in Dubai on their behalf – including Sweden, Switzerland, Canada, Germany, Austria, Ireland and the UK.
Mr Geetharthanan said the refugees, who were housed near the Jebel Ali port, needed to be able to contact loved ones at home and a counsellor.

“A telephone or fax facility would help them contact their family,” he said. “This would make them feel more safe when they can share emotions with people they know.

“There is also need for a counsellor to provide regular psychological support. Their mental state is not good because they are away from family and we need to get a counsellor to talk to them, at least on the phone.”


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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Exclusive: Erasing the cultural leftover of Tamils to convert Sri Lanka into Sinhala country

   By  A Correspondent -
   Colombo
24 Apr 2013
Posted 04-Aug-2011
Vol 2 Issue 31
Travelling through the Tamil areas in North Sri Lanka, one is shocked to see the changing demography of the land. A land that was once inhabited by Tamils and a land that had a distinct flavor of Tamil culture and heritage is now in the grip of Sinhalese hegemony, seen in the form of Buddhist statues, viharas and stupas dotting the landscape that is also lined by broken Tamil homes and newly built shanties of Tamil refugees.
Sinhala and Sinhalisation are now the watch words in the predominantly Tamil areas of North Sri Lanka. Starting from Vavuniya, the change is perceptible as one enters the Tamil heartland.
A recently constructed Buddhist stupa at Kanagarayankulam
All those entering into the north have to pass through Omanthai - which has been given a Sinhalese sounding name, ‘Omantha’ - check point on A9 national highway. At this place where more than 90 per cent of the travelers are Tamil speakers, one needs to go with a person knowing Sinhala to answer the queries from the Sinhalese soldiers.

Throughout our travel into the Tamil hinterland, we could sense an air of Sinhalese triumphalism.

Military camps and Sinhala soldiers are a common sight in Tamil areas. Out of a total land mass of 65,619 sq km, the Tamils inhabited 18,880 sq km of land in the north and east, but after May 2009, the defence forces have occupied more than 7,000 sq km of Tamil land.

It is estimated that 2500 temples and 400 churches have been destroyed. The Sinhala forces do not permit the people to reconstruct these worship places and many are in a dilapidated state.

On the other hand, even though the only Buddhists who are to be found here are the Sinhalese soldiers, nearly 2500 Buddhist stupas and statues have come up in Tamil areas in the last couple of years, according to the locals.
A huge Buddha statue at Kilinochchi, the erstwhile capital of Tamil rebels
A Buddhist Vihara named Mahatota Raja Maha Vihara has come up within 50 meters of the famous Thirukethiswaram temple in Mannar district. The ancient name for Thirukethiswaram area was Mahathottam.

The government has been making a big hype about a so-called development programme in Tamil areas called Vadakin Vasantham (Uthuru Wasanthaya or Northern Springs).

Infrastructure development, electricity, water supply and sanitation, agriculture, irrigation, livestock development, inland fisheries, health, solid waste disposal, education, sports, cultural affairs and transportation are some of the areas that they claim will be covered under this program.

However, the real beneficiaries of this scheme are not going to be Tamils but Sinhala jobless youth, who would be employed in the projects that have been handed to Sinhala contractors.

The defence forces will be the ones who will be utilizing the newly developed infrastructure as a major chunk of the funds will be allocated towards road development to facilitate easy troop movement.
A Sinhala-only signboard at an important junction in Puthukudyiruppu
In Cheddikulam a housing scheme for Sinhala returnees is underway. One would have welcomed it if it was the same 13 displaced families that were to return. Instead, some 75 new Sinhala families are being relocated in the area.

Already 165 Sinhala families have been resettled in Kokkachchaankulam, which is to be renamed Kalabowasewa.

A grand new Sinhala medium school for new returnees has come up on Madhu road, whereas hundreds of schools for Tamil kids in the vicinity are in a state of disarray.

According to locals, forest wealth in the Tamil areas is looted by the Sinhalese from the south who enter the forest with permission of the armed forces for timber logging.

People also complain that Sinhala Buddhist archaeologists are engaged in nefarious activities of Sinhalization. They are said to be visiting Tamil areas and 'excavating' Buddha statues that they themselves plant earlier. The purpose of this exercise is allegedly to claim that the territory in question had been a Sinhala Buddhist area.

Where there were only a few old Sinhala sign boards pointing directions and mentioning names of places, today one is dumbstruck at the sheer number of new Sinhala name/direction boards in the Tamil areas.
A Sri Lankan defence outpost in Puthukudyiruppu with name board in Sinhalese and English
In Mullaithivu and many other places in the north, Tamils are not allowed to enter the sea, while their Sinhala counterparts from the south are allowed to fish in their areas.

Locals say that all petitions to government services and establishments have to be given in Sinhala only since 2009.

In the heart of Kilinochchi town, the erstwhile administrative capital of Tamil rebels, streets sport Sinhalese names such as Mahinda Rajapaksa Mawatha, and Aluth mawatte (The new road).

Three roads close to the A9 highway in Kanakarayankulam have been given Sinhala names - Kosala Perera road, Anura Perera road, and Rev Yatiravana Vimala Thero Street. The first two names are those of soldiers who took part in the war and the last one is the name of a Buddhist monk.

Where will this all lead to? Only time will tell.
Also ReadIntellectuals and activists support the Tamil cause across the language divide

Video: Burmese Security Filled Mass Graves With Muslims

Colombo TelegraphApril 24, 2013
Burmese security forces organised and stood guard over Buddhist attacks on Muslim settlements before burying scores of bodies, some with their hands tied behind their backs, in mass graves, Human Rights Watch said in a report.


Commonwealth Urged To Reassess Sri Lanka’s Suitability To Host CHOGM And Assume Chair

At a panel discussion to launch the new International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) report, A Crisis of Legitimacy: The Impeachment of Chief Justice Bandaranayake and the Erosion of the Rule of Law in Sri Lanka, panellist Sadakat Kadri said, ‘Sri Lanka is due to be holding the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, CHOGM, in Colombo in November 2013. It is up to the Commonwealth to decide whether or not that goes ahead. But the IBAHRI notes that the Commonwealth is committed by its Charter to the observance of the rule of law, good governance, independence of the judiciary and the upholding of human rights; the question for the Commonwealth, therefore is, does it stand for those values? If it does, it needs to consider very carefully whether Sri Lanka is an appropriate venue for the CHOGM and whether it is an appropriate chair in office for the two years after that, because Sri Lanka will become the body that represents the Commonwealth and its core values around the world.’ Mr Kadri, the rapporteur of a fact-finding delegation that, under the auspices of the IBAHRI, investigated the independence of the legal profession in Sri Lanka added, ‘There is a very real danger that if the CHOGM meeting goes ahead [in Sri Lanka], the present government will consider it a licence to continue along the course that it has so far proceeded and fail to uphold the Commonwealth’s values.’
Colombo Telegraph
Chief Justice - Shirani
The launch of A Crisis of Legitimacy took place on Monday 22 April 2013 at the House of Lords in London, United Kingdom. The audience included representatives of the Government of Sri Lanka, High Commissions, human rights groups, lawyers and journalists.
During the opening address, Baroness Helena Kennedy of the Shaws said, ‘IBAHRI delegations have visited Sri Lanka in 2001 and 2009; unfortunately Sri Lanka would not admit the latest [IBAHRI] delegation of senior lawyers into the country to report upon the rule of law and the impeachment proceedings against Chief Justice Bandaranayake.’ She added, ‘It is so important that we give sustenance to other people who are struggling to protect human rights and the rule of law, and all the evidence suggests that the rule of law is seriously under threat in Sri Lanka.’
Overall, the research underpinning the Report revealed that the removal of Chief Justice Bandaranayake from office in Sri Lanka was unlawful, is undermining public confidence in the rule of law, and is threatening to eviscerate the country’s judiciary as an independent guarantor of constitutional rights. Discussing these issues at the IBAHRI Report launch were fact-finding delegation members The Honourable Justice Muhammad Lawal Uwais, a former Chief Justice of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and Mr Kadri, a UK Barrister at Doughty Street Chambers, together with Dr Sunil Coorey, of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka. Alex Wilks, an IBAHRI Senior Programme Lawyer, moderated the discussion.
Justice Lawal Uwais remarked during the debate, ‘The removal of Chief Justice Bandaranayake was done by the parliament and the Executive of Sri Lanka in contravention of the rule of law. The removal was rushed, ignoring the fact that there was a case before the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, challenging the right to initiate the proceedings to remove the Justice from office’.
Film footage of the Report launch will be posted on the IBAHRI Sri Lanka-dedicated website pages in due course, alongside the short video clips (click here to view) that gave an overview of the salient findings of the Report ahead of the launch.
IBA

Film - Sri Lanka facing constitutional crisis concludes IBAHRI report


http://www.ibanet.org/ImageHandler.ashx?ImageUid=b98afeee-eb50-436b-89e6-a31aa7fd3804
In March 2013 the IBAHRI conducted a remote fact-finding mission to investigate the impeachment proceedings against Chief Justice Bandaranayake and the rule of law in Sri Lanka. This film summarises the situation in Sri Lanka and gives some background to the report before discussing its findings and recommendations.

  • Download the IBAHRI report A Crisis of Legitimacy: The Impeachment of Chief Justice Bandaranayake and the Erosion of the Rule of Law in Sri Lanka.
  • Download the Executive Summary in Tamil
  • Download the Executive Summary in Sinhala
  • Read more about the IBAHRI Sri Lanka mission

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Asia PacificIBAHRISri Lanka