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, May 4, 2013


Canada Urges Immediate Release of Azad Sally

May 3, 2013 - Andrew Bennett, Canada’s Ambassador for Religious Freedom, today issued the following statement:
“Canada condemns the arrest of Azad Sally, leader of Sri Lanka’s newly formed Muslim Tamil National Alliance. Mr. Sally was reportedly taken into custody by Sri Lankan authorities on May 2.
“We call for Mr. Sally’s immediate release. We understand his arrest is likely motivated by his work on human rights, in particular his defence of religious freedom, including the right of religious communities to practise their faith in Sri Lanka without fear of reprisals.
“This latest action by the authorities suggests strongly that those who dare to criticize the Government of Sri Lanka can face consequences such as imprisonment.
“Canada will continue to stand by all those who courageously speak out against egregious violations of human rights and freedom of religion.”
- 30 -
For further information, media representatives may contact:
Foreign Affairs Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada
613-995-1874
Follow us on Twitter: @DFAIT_MAECI


Canada Urges Immediate Release of Azath Salley


May 4, 2013 |
Colombo Telegraph“Canada condemns the arrest of Azath Salley, leader of Sri Lanka’s newly formed Muslim Tamil National Alliance. Mr. Salley was reportedly taken into custody by Sri Lankan authorities on May 2.Andrew Bennett, Canada’s Ambassador for Religious Freedom, today issued the following statement:
Andrew Bennett, Canada’s Ambassador for Religious Freedom
“We call for Mr. Salley’s immediate release. We understand his arrest is likely motivated by his work on human rights, in particular his defence of religious freedom, including the right of religious communities to practise their faith in Sri Lanka without fear of reprisals.
“This latest action by the authorities suggests strongly that those who dare to criticize the Government of Sri Lanka can face consequences such as imprisonment.
“Canada will continue to stand by all those who courageously speak out against egregious violations of human rights and freedom of religion.”
For further information, media representatives may contact:
Foreign Affairs Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada
613-995-1874



Arresting Salley And Duminda’s Ceremonial Welcome At The Presidential Palace

By Karu Jayasuriya -May 4, 2013 
Karu Jayasuriya MP
Colombo TelegraphIt is in the strongest possible terms that the arrest of former UNP Deputy Mayor Azath Salley must be condemned by all right thinking peoples of this country. His arrest – for allegedly inciting communal hatred under the prevention of terrorism act, is further proof that the Government continues to retain these repressive war time laws to hunt political opponents in peace time.
Mr. Salley’s arrest must not come as a surprise to any observer who has been witnessing the dismal levels to which law enforcement in this country has descended. Mr. Salley’s offence has been to warn of the dire consequences this country could —face if hate campaigns against a single community continue to grow.
Mr. Salley should in fact be saluted for speaking out against hate groups targeting one community of people in this country, when the Government continues to watch from the sidelines as another conflict brews in our island. In terms of battling racial hatred and calling for unity in Sri Lanka, all of us stand beside Mr. Salley. Many of us would fight to the end to prevent Sri Lanka from taking another dangerous turn down the road to a repeat of a 1983 type conflagration. The crime Mr. Salley has purportedly committed by an increasingly tyrannical regime should be work like a badge of honour by all patriotic Sri Lankans who do not believe in ethnic or religious divisions or hatred.
The arrest of Mr. Salley for alleged statements to a newspaper comes at the same time when a politician who is accused of a quadruple murder including that of a ruling party leader was granted bail. Sri Lankans are intelligent enough to see not only the irony of these events but the sheer shamelessness and the disgusting impunity with which the current regime governs. An alleged murder suspect is given police protection and a ceremonial welcome at the Presidential palace soon after receiving bail while an activist calling for unity and warning against an impending division is arrested for being a terrorist.
With the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting due to be held in Sri lanka in November 2013 the world’s attention is drawn to our country. It is sad that our government continues to  demonstrate that it does not adhere to any Commonwealth values that prescribe good governance, freedom of expression, democracy and the rule of law. While Sri Lanka has lost its standing as a shining democracy this regime seems determined to further tarnish our country’s image as a lawless land where goons rule and injustice prevails.
I call upon all freedom loving Sri Lankans to recognize the grave injustices being carried out by the ruling regime. The intimidation of Mr. Azath Salley is not just aimed at an individual. It is aimed at an idea, an idea that all Sri Lankans can live as one, an idea that there will be justice in this land and above all an idea that Sri Lanka need not be consumed once again by the flames of hatred and war. It is an idea that is worth preserving and fighting for, even against the mightiest odds.
Despot MaRa turns desperate seeing mammoth opposition May day rally crowds : witch hunt begins- Azad Sally arrested by CID
Lanaka-e-News -03.May. 9.30PM) 2013Despotic MaRa who got the jitters has turned so desperate after seeing the mammoth opposition May day rallies that in his characteristic and brutal fashion has therefore started a witch hunt against the opposition politicians the following day itself. 

Accordingly , Azad Sally the leader of the Jathika samagi Peramuna , which is a constituent party of the joint opposition had been taken into custody on the 2nd morning by the CID. Sally was taken into custody when he was in his house at Kolonnawa. Though the CID had stated there are a number of complaints against him , they had however not been disclosed.

On 27th April , the CID had arrived to arrest Sally , but as he was not at home , a message in writing had been left requesting him to call at the CID to record a statement. 

National defense media spokesman Lakshman Hulugalla at a media briefing on 2nd evening said, Azad Sally was arrested for making announcements attacking the government and on account of his provocative statements that incite racial hatred and he also said Sally was arrested under PTA (Prevention of Terrorism Act)

Today(03) evening reported Sally has been admitted to the Colombo General Hospital.

At the last Municipal Council elections , Sally supported the Rajapakse government , but later resigned from the government and joined the joint opposition led by the UNP. He was a UNP politico in the past.

Sally who built a reputation as a fearless and forthright opposition politico castigating the government for its egregious sins and evils became the target of government’s vicious vendetta lately. 

Despotic and desperate MaRa who is now paranoid stemming from maniacal power greed had instructed his murderous brother Gota JaRa to do something to teach an unforgettable lesson to every opposition politico who criticizes the government . Nava Sihala Urumaya leader Sarath Manamendra was also arrested earlier on based on a divorce case in pursuance of this vindictive agenda of the parasitic Rajapakses who are at this juncture frantically concerned only with selfish and bestial power perpetuation having realized that their popularity is nose-diving at explosive speed. 

Today UNP media division head MP Mangala Samaraweera strongly condemns the arbitrary and malicious arrest of fomer Colombo mayor Asad sali by the CID hiding the true intention of the Govt behind the prevention of terrorism Act.

Issuing a media statement, Mr.Samaraweera says that the true nature of Sri Lankan peace and democracy has now been revealed to the Commonwealth states.

The complete statement is as follows...

We were gravely disturbed to learn of the arrest of former Deputy mayor of Colombo and Muslim Tamil National Alliance leader Azath Salley by the CID on May 2nd 2013. 

This is yet another blatant manifestation of the depths to which the rule of law has sunk in this country and further proof that even as the Government prepares to host the next Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo in a few months, it is simultaneously taking steps to suppress dissent and victimise political opponents in a manner that runs directly contrary to the fundamental tenets of democracy.

Mr. Salley has been arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, a draconian piece of legislation whose provisions to detain suspects without trial for 180 days, and has no place in a country that is no longer fighting terrorism. Mr. Salley's purported to be the incitement of communal hatred, for a newspaper interview in which he warned of the dire consequences of fanning the flames of ethnic and religious hatred. 

It is strange that the PTA provisions permitting law enforcement to take into custody those who threaten strife between communities were never used to arrest the thugs who attacked a Muslim owned enterprise in Pepiliyana in March. Or that they were not used to arrest those extremist elements that forced the police to disperse a peaceful anti-hate vigil in April. It is baffling that these provisions are not being used to take action against the devastating reports of assaults on Muslim places of worship and women wearing the Muslim headdress. 

There is no rationale in the authorities continuing to permit rallies filled with hate speech against the Muslim community and their way of life to take place in every major town in this country. Mr. Salley's arrest, ironically called for repeatedly by hate groups afforded significant state patronage, makes it clear that the Government deals its justice by two yardsticks, one for the majority community, which can spout invective against other religions and ethnic groups freely and another for minorities who dare to issue warnings about the dangerous turn Sri Lanka is taking. His arrest is another clear indication of where the regime truly stands when it comes to ending racism and hatred. 

Mr. Salley, has in these recently troubled times, been a courageous voice against the majoritarian racist elements that are threatening the re-emergence of ethnic and religious conflict in our country. If it is the regime's answer to arrest Mr. Salley for warning against the dangers of this hate campaign, then perhaps each of us who also denounce the extremist campaigns of hate against Sri Lanka's Muslim community must all be arrested for believing in a pluralistic society in which every Sri Lankan, irrespective of race, religion or caste, must be treated as equal citizens. If opposing hate is a crime, then we are all criminals today.

Last week, following the end of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group meeting in London, Commonwealth Secretary General told reporters there that Sri Lanka's rule of law situation and its judicial reform would be taking a turn for the better within a matter of weeks, instead of months. He told journalists that he had received assurances of these changes by the highest echelons of the ruling Government in Colombo. It is deeply ironic that those remarks came on the same day that Sri Lanka witnessed the tragi-comic drama of the miraculous recovery of a murder suspect and Government Parliamentarian, who was supposedly so sick he could not attend court after spending over an year overseas receiving treatment, march out of hospital and straight to the Presidential Palace to be 'blessed', apparently in the pink of health.

The Secretary General's words seem more ironic still, in light of the fate that has befallen Mr. Salley. 

The Government has shown its true face towards the minorities and its commitment to ending hate and strife in this country.

This is the justice Sri Lanka's ruling regime knows. 

This is the democracy and reconciliation that the next CHOGM host seeks to showcase before the world come November. 

We do indeed live in a land like no other.

Salley, A Courageous Voice Against The Majoritarian Racist Elements

By Mangala Samaraweera -May 4, 2013 
Mangala Samaraweera MP
Colombo TelegraphWe were gravely disturbed to learn of the arrest of former Deputy mayor of Colombo and Muslim Tamil National Alliance leader Azath Salley by the CID on May 2nd 2013.
This is yet another blatant manifestation of the depths to which the rule of law has sunk in this country and further proof that even as the Government prepares to host the next Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo in a few months, it is simultaneously taking steps to suppress dissent and victimise political opponents in a manner that runs directly contrary to the fundamental tenets of democracy.
Mr. Salley has been arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, a draconian piece of legislation whose provisions to detain suspects without trial for 180 days, and has no place in a country that is no longer fighting terrorism. Mr. Salley’s purported to be the incitement of communal hatred, for a newspaper interview in which he warned of the dire consequences of fanning the flames of ethnic and religious hatred.
It is strange that the PTA provisions permitting law enforcement to take into custody those who threaten strife between communities were never used to arrest the thugs who attacked a Muslim owned enterprise in Pepiliyana in March. Or that they were not used to arrest those extremist elements that forced the police to disperse a peaceful anti-hate vigil in April. It is baffling that these provisions are not being used to take action against the devastating reports of assaults on Muslim places of worship and women wearing the Muslim headdress.
There is no rationale in the authorities continuing to permit rallies filled with hate speech against the Muslim community and their way of life to take place in every major town in this country. Mr. Salley’s arrest, ironically called for repeatedly by hate groups afforded significant state patronage, makes it clear that the Government deals its justice by two yardsticks, one for the majority community, which can spout invective against other religions and ethnic groups freely and another for minorities who dare to issue warnings about the dangerous turn Sri Lanka is taking. His arrest is another clear indication of where the regime truly stands when it comes to ending racism and hatred.
Mr. Salley, has in these recently troubled times, been a courageous voice against the majoritarian racist elements that are threatening the re-emergence of ethnic and religious conflict in our country. If it is the regime’s answer to arrest Mr. Salley for warning against the dangers of this hate campaign, then perhaps each of us who also denounce the extremist campaigns of hate against Sri Lanka’s Muslim community must all be arrested for believing in a pluralistic society in which every Sri Lankan, irrespective of race, religion or caste, must be treated as equal citizens. If opposing hate is a crime, then we are all criminals today.
Last week, following the end of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group meeting in London, Commonwealth Secretary General told reporters there that Sri Lanka’s rule of law situation and its judicial reform would be taking a turn for the better within a matter of weeks, instead of months. He told journaliststhat he had received assurances of these changes by the highest echelons of the ruling Government in Colombo. It is deeply ironic that those remarks came on the same day that Sri Lanka witnessed the tragi-comic drama of the miraculous recovery of a murder suspect and Government Parliamentarian, who was supposedly so sick he could not attend court after spending over an year overseas receiving treatment, march out of hospital and straight to the Presidential Palace to be ‘blessed’, apparently in the pink of health.
The Secretary General’s words seem more ironic still, in light of the fate that has befallen Mr. Salley.
The Government has shown its true face towards the minorities and its commitment to ending hate and strife in this country.
This is the justice Sri Lanka’s ruling regime knows.
This is the democracy and reconciliation that the next CHOGM host seeks to showcase before the world come November.
We do indeed live in a land like no other.
Economy controlled by ‘criminals’
By W. Siri Ananda-2013-05-04 


The country's economy is being handled by four 'bureaucrats,' who are 'white-collar criminals', Minister of Technology and Research, Patali Champika Ranawaka, alleged yesterday.
Speaking to Ceylon Today, the minister charged, "These 'criminals' have no vision or proper knowledge to handle the country's economy. They are in their own world. The country should be rescued from these smart 'white-collar criminals.' Why should we allow them to decide on the electricity tariff? It should be done according to a systematic formula." He said the power and energy sector should be given maximum attention and be regarded as the number one priority.“Although infrastructure development such as road constructions is important, power and energy sector development is vital for the economy. Unless we take immediate actions to introduce Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) instead of fossil fuel and coal, the power sector will suffer. Also, the need of the hour is to expand and repair the oil refinery, if not, the country may face severe economic crisis in the near future,” he pointed out.

Minister Ranawaka said, “The root cause of the present electricity crisis is that we did not take any action to set up mini-hydro and coal power plants in the 1990s. After the completion of major Mahaweli projects, the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) engineers suggested to build mini-hydro and coal power plants in Mawalla, Puttalam and several other suitable locations.

“They made suggestions for a long-term electricity development plan under an automated system plan in 1985. None of those projects were commissioned due to various reasons, including public protests.

“In 1990, to resolve the power crisis prevailing at that time, the government invited the private sector to set up thermal power plants, which use fuel for power generation. The electricity price hike was the negative result of the thermal power plants, which shot up the electricity unit price from Rs 8 to Rs 84.”

Therefore, he suggested, the country should go for LNG, which is cost-effective and environmentally healthy. “We need not have big LNG terminals. As I have suggested in one of my previous Cabinet Papers, a soaring terminal instead of a large-scale LNG terminal can be installed in Kerawalapitiya.

He also said, “The expansion work of the Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery, which is 40 years old, must be commenced soon and the Hydro Cracker Technology should be introduced to cut the cost of importing fuel and to produce fuel.

JHU threatens quit Govt.
2013-05-04 
The government constituent party, the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), yesterday warned it would be compelled to quit the ruling coalition, if the government goes ahead with the Northern Provincial Council election, scheduled to take place in September.

However, National Organizer of the JHU, Nishantha Sri Warnasinghe, expressed confidence the government would consider their concerns, before going ahead with the election. If the government insists on holding elections in the North, he said, the gazette notification announcing the polls should be issued after making certain changes to the Provincial Council Act.

Warnasinghe said land and police powers that have been granted to the Provincial Councils should be reviewed.
He also said the government is actively engaging in resettling the Sinhalese who had been forced out of the North by the Tamil Tigers.

Leader of the National Freedom Front, Wimal Weerawansa, earlier wanted to quit the government, if the Northern Provincial Council elections are held under the existing Provincial Council Act.
Frederica Janz ordered to pay Rs 1 M to Ladduwahetty
Happier days - Frederica Jansz with police protection provided by the regime


SRI LANKA BRIEFSaturday, May 4, 2013

Colombo District Judge, Amal Ranaraja, ordered former Editor of the Sunday Leader, Frederica Jansz to pay Rs 1 million to President's Counsel, Nalin Ladduwahetty, for defaming him in four articles published by the Sunday Leader.

The Court observed that Ladduwahetty is a well-respected lawyer and the plaintiff proved the case against the defendant.The Court ordered she pay the cost of the case to the plaintiff and the interest of the award from the date of the judgment delivered.

It was informed to Court the defendant had failed to make an apology to the plaintiff after receiving the letter of demand sent to her. During the course of the trial, it was proved the defendant defamed the plaintiff in four articles published by the defendant, stated the judgment.

The Court ordered to call the case on 2 June to ascertain whether the defendant had complied with the order. President’s Counsel, Romesh de Silva, appeared for the plaintiff with attorney, Sugath Caldera, instructed by Paul Ratnayaka Law Firm.

It did not approve the appointment of Chief Justice Mohan Perris; hence United America opposed him to direct that panel. Conditions of US was not acceptable, hence the financial assistance granted by that country was rejected by Sri Lanka was said by Justice Minister Rauf Hakeem.

If failed to come to a compromise with the Sri Lanka officials, the 450 million rupees financial aid allocated for the judiciary structure US wanted to withdraw  from it.

Justice Minister Raff Hakeem concerning this gave information to an Indian media said, the financial aid with conditions will affect the sovereignty of Sri Lanka was the reason to reject.

Conditions for grant will not be suitable for a sovereignty country was said. Concerning the conditions was queried, and Hakeem said, beyond this I cannot say anything.

Meanwhile Chief Justice Mohan Peiris leading the panel utilizing this grant finance was the cause for this controversy was the news item published.

They did not approve the appointment of Chief Justice Mohan Peiris; hence US opposed him to head the panel leader.

However government urged Mohan Peiris to lead the panel.  Sri Lanka considers, it being a sovereignty country, the oppose of US cannot be accepted was said.

Saturday , 04 May 2013


Rumsfeld Announced $2.3 TRILLION Was Missing from Pentagon One Day Before 9/11

May-01-2013 17:12
So soon we forget...
Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
(SALEM) - The most unusual words were spoken one day before the national tragedy of September 11th 2001, by then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Absolutely out of the blue, he released startling information to the American public, about an incredibly large amount of US taxpayer money that had somehow just gone missing from the defense budget.
The amount of money missing from the Pentagon was $2.3 trillion. Rumsfeld blamed the loss on military spending.
All of this was quickly forgotten the next day as airplanes slammed into the twin towers and an airborne object struck the Pentagon. Also of course, the plane crash in Pennsylvania of which the coroner said there was no sign of a large airplane and not a single body...
Flag sales in America shot through the roof the day after Rumsfeld's mostly forgotten bombshell of a speech, as rescue workers would for their first of many days, inhale the dust and debris that were once building material in the nation's most auspicious buildings. These rescue workers, their medical care... would be difficult or in some cases, nonexistent.

A lack of resources to pay for health problems incurred by rescue workers, is but one of the myriad stories that would be generated that day, when so many lives were changed.
The next story, would be Osama bin Laden's clear and total denial of any responsibility for the so-called "terrorist attacks" that helped US President George W. Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney, launch wars in Afghanistan, and eventually, Iraq. People should have little confidence that they were given the real facts about September 11th or bin Laden.
I have to wonder too if people reading this adequately comprehend the enormity of $2.3 trillion dollars. In essence, that is enough money to provide every living man, woman and child in America, $8,000 a piece.
Watch this video and share the story with your friends, relatives, co-workers, etc. This is something all Americans need to know.
With or without drawing conclusions; Americans who talk about politics have an obligation to acknowledge this speech on Sept. 10th and must understand that much more was taking place in early September 2001 than just the 9/11 attacks. Rumsfeld revealed earth shattering numbers regarding missing trillions, only to have the knowledge disappear in the rubble.
Context of 'September 10, 2001: Vice President Cheney’s Domestic Terrorism Task Force Finally Beginning to Hire Staff' - historycommons.org

Friday, May 3, 2013


The Working People Of Sri Lanka, Unite!

Colombo Telegraph
By Shanie -May 4, 2013
Bala Tampoe | Photo courtesy iam.lk
In all men’s hearts it is
Some spirit old
Has turned with malign kiss
Our lives to mould.
O! ancient crimson curse!
Corrode, consume,
Give back this universe
Its pristine bloom.
Isaac Rosenberg (1890-1918)
Last Wednesday was May Day – the International Workers’ Day which has been officially recognised and observed since 1890. It began as a commemoration of the death of four workers by Police shooting in Haymarket, Chicago during a General Strike. The Second International which met in Paris in 1889 to coincide with the centennial of the French Revolution called for demonstrations on 1st May 1890 and thereafter every year as an act of solidarity by the workers throughout the world. It was not long after. May Day began to be observed in Sri Lanka. In 1922, A E Gooneinha had formed the Ceylon Labour Union, the first organisation of workers in Sri Lanka. The first organised strike was by the laundry workers of Polwatte, Kollupitiya. The laundry workers were reportedly led by an Anglican priest who was then the Vicar of the Church of St Michael and All Angels in the same village. The first major trade union to be formed was perhaps the Ceylon Mercantile Union in 1928. Also about the same time, the General Clerical Service Union. The CMU represented the white collar workers in the private sector while the GCSU was formed to represent the same class of workers in the public service.
Up to the fifties and even the early sixties, May Day was observed throughout Sri Lanka as a mass rally of workers which was preceded by street processions. The Government of S W R D Bandaranaike had declared May Day as a public and Mercantile holiday. There was genuine worker participation in the rallies and in the processions, largely because the trade unions, despite most of them being led by left politicians, were genuine workers’ organisations, unlike today when they are  mostly mere appendages of political parties. Whereas up to about fifty years ago, May Day was a workers’ rally putting forward trade union demands and the workers in the processions shouting catchy and colourful slogans, today it has become a political pageant with even musical shows. Then, the trade unions themselves mobilised their members to travel and join the processions and rallies; now people (not necessarily trade unionists) are transported in buses; if it is for a rally of a ruling government party, the state owned buses are used. For the people thus being transported, it is an all expenses paid outing. The slide began with the formation of ‘trade unions’ by political parties, who until then had shown little interest in workers’ rights.
Effectiveness of Trade Unions
There are no short cuts for workers to achieve their demands for a working wage and dignified working conditions. Joining a trade union sponsored by the political party then holding the reins of government only debases both the individual member as well as the trade union concerned. Today, perhaps the oldest trade unions are the Ceylon Mercantile Union, the General Clerical Service Union and the Ceylon Workers’ Congress. They have always been led by men who were also politicians. But the leadership in the old days maintained thnir independence and never sacrificed their membership at the altar of political gain. The membership of those trade unions included workers who were supporters of various parties. The leadership of the CMU and the GCSU were members of the LSSP but all the membership did not necessarily support the LSSP. The members had their own political party affiliations or sympathies but they accepted the leadership who ensured they conducted the trade union activities in a non-partisan manner. The CWC was in a category of its own. It was both a political party as well as a trade union. In S Thondaman they had a charismatic leader and, by and large, the membership dared not challenge him. In turn, Thondaman also looked after the interests of the workers, not misusing his position for personal or political gain.
Today, the trade union movement is a pale shadow of the dynamism and vitality it showed fifty years ago. It is only the CMU which has maintained its unity and strength and that is because in Bala Tampoe they have a person unmatched for his qualities of leadership. It is for this reason that on this International Workers’ Day, we wish to pay a tribute to this colossus among trade unionists.
Comrade Bala Tampoe
Bala Tampoe became the Secretary of the CMU at the comparatively young age of 25. After becoming one of the first graduates of the newly established University of Ceylon, he had been appointed a Lecturer at the Government School of Agriculture in Peradeniya. But as a committed socialist, he had participated in the General Strike of 1947 and lost his job as a result. But the loss to academia was to prove a huge gain for the trade union movement. Last year, both the Trade Union movement in Sri Lanka and Tampoe turned ninety; and Tampoe himself completed sixty-five years as General Secretary of the CMU – an incredible achievement by any standard. During these sixty five years, Tampoe has earned the respect not only of the workers but of the employers as well, both for his integrity as well as for his uncompromising stand for the rights of the workers he represented.
In 1966, Tampoe married May Wickremasuriya, who had joined the CMU as assistant secretary ten years earlier. On her death in 1998, Franklin Amerasinghe, the then Director General of the Employers Federation, in a tribute to her, stated that Bala and May were an inseparable team. Bala’s advocacy was complemented by May’s incisive mind and solid preparation. Shortly before her death, Tampoe himself addressing the CMU Delegates Conference referred to her as ‘my most valued comrade and companion for over forty years….If not for her unfailing assistance and support. I could not have done whatever I have done for this Union and the workers’ movement.’
It is not easy to separate Tampoe the trade unionist from Tampoe the politician, or indeed from Tampoe the Man. If he was uncompromising in his commitment to the workers movement, he was equally uncompromising in his life-long commitment to the socialist ideology, and equally uncompromising in the dignity and integrity with which he conducted himself in any forum. When the LSSP joined the coalition government in 1964, he left the Party along with Edmund Samarakkody and others to found LSSP (Revolutionay). He has never wavered in his political stance or principles.
In 1971, the JVP spearheaded the first southern insurgency. It was brutally suppressed and its leaders were arraigned before a specially constituted Criminal Justice Commission. Tampoe readily agreed to defend those who had to face a trial before the CJC. Lionel Bopage was one of the leaders of the JVP then and in a recent essay, he refers to the contribution of Tampoe to their defence: “Bala did not have any doubt that the JVP in the seventies was a genuine youth movement seeking redress to the socio-economic issues that affected them. For most of us in the JVP, it was our first encounter with the law and we were convinced that Comrade Bala and his team were correct in their position because the CJC trial was not just a legal matter but predominantly a political matter. It was on a decision made by the CMU that Comrade Bala and the team appeared on behalf us of or advised us, the accused in the main trial. Thereafter, throughout the main trial, Comrades Rohana WijeweeraUyangoda, Kelly Senanayake and myself regularly met with Comrade Bala and his team. Most of the trial was full of political sparks with the state prosecutors and the judges on one side and us and our counsel on the other side of the fence. Comrade Bala and his team demonstrated not only their brilliant legal skills but also their astute political skills in uncompromisingly exposing the acts of class betrayal by the government of the day and their supporters. The trial also exposed fault lines in the JVP. It exposed us as being politically immature, romantic and adventurist in our methods of struggle. Some in the JVP changed their political stripes while others left the political fray for personal reasons.”
Women in the TU Movement
Apart from May Wickremasuriya Tampoe, there were many other women who played a leading role in strengthening the workers’ movement in Sri Lanka. Perhaps this needs a separate study by some scholar, both as to the Trade union movement in general and the role played specifically by women in it. Many women like Doreen Wickremasinghe, Kusuma Gunawardena, Florence Senanayake Vivienne Goonewardene, Tamara Kumari Illangaratne and Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga were Members of Parliament who actively supported the labour movement but they were not involved directly in trade unionism. There were however some lesser known names like Ponsinahamy Ediriweera, Catherine Perera, Lassie de Silva and Trixie Mendis who in one way or another made a significant contribution to the workers’ movement. It is hoped that their contribution will be recognised when the story of trade unionism in Sri Lanka is written.
Workers position today
Today, the real burden for the middle and working classes in Sri Lanka is the unbearable increase in the cost of living. While the country’s scarce resources are being expended on schemes like a new international airport, a modern new harbour, international sports stadiums, hosting or attempting to host Commonwealth Conferences, Asian Games and other grandiose projects of Ozymandiasian proportions, the living costs for the ordinary citizen keeps mounting. The recent rise in electricity tariffs will have a huge impact on living costs. The changes to the tariff that were announced on May Day is not going to make any significant difference.
The plight of the workers in the Free Trade Zones continues to worsen. Now there are reports that some of the FTZ companies are seeking to bring in cheap (slave?) labour from countries like China to reduce their costs of manufacturing. It is hoped that better counsel will prevail and that this request will be denied. But strange things can happen for which we need a vigilant opposition, something that we lack today.
At a felicitation meeting held recently, Bala Tampoe commented: “When Mahinda Rajapaksa was Minister of Labour, he formulated the Workers Charter to which we ourselves contributed. At the time he could not get it passed in Parliament. Today he has a two thirds majority. Is it even taken up today?
No! That is because today they say it is irrelevant. I can see that there is lack of solidarity amongst workers. It is time to revive the power of the worker. We may not have the power of the ballot. But we certainly have the power of the labour.”
Yes, it is time for the working people of Sri Lanka to unite. They have nothing to lose but the chains that bind them. President Rajapakse cannot continue claiming that the ending of the northern insurgency has freed them. The same and newer chains continue to bind the working people of our country.



Stephen Harper To Skip Commonwealth Meeting In Sri Lanka, Citing Human Rights Abuses

Harper Sri Lanka Commonwealth
Indian Tamil activists and supporters stomp on a portrait of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa during a protest against Sri Lanka’s alleged wartime abuses in Chennai, India, Thursday, March 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Arun Sankar K.)
05/03/2013 canada-politics
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper won’t be attending the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Sri Lanka next November, The Huffington Post Canada has learned.
The decision may ostracize Harper as the only G8-level leader not attending the meeting with Britain, Australia and New Zealand all expected to send their prime ministers, but it is expected to be very popular with Tamils, a new community the Tories are going after.
The Conservative government has yet to decide whether it will send a minister, the high commissioner or any staff to the biennial meeting — a decision that will highlight how loudly the Government of Canada wants to make a point.
During Question Period this week, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said “no one is standing up stronger against the regime in Colombo, Sri Lanka, than this prime minister and this government.”
“If the top guy stays away but someone more junior goes, that conveys a strong but not as complete message as would be conveyed by staying away completely,” said Alex Neve, the secretary general of Amnesty International Canada.
“Our position is unless we see significant and substantial signs of human rights improvements in Sri Lanka, the meeting simply shouldn’t be happening there."
It’s highly problematic for an institution which purports to support human rights to hold a meeting in a country with deteriorating human rights, he said. The host country of the CHOGM also becomes the chair of the Commonwealth for the next two years -- which means the consequences of holding the meeting in Sri Lanka will be much deeper than photos ups and two days of meetings, Neve added.
On Thursday, Amnesty International called on the Sri Lankan government to release or charge Azad Sally, the leader of the opposition Muslim Tamil National Alliance, with an “international recognizable criminal offence” after he was taken into custody that morning by intelligence services for unknown reasons. The group also released a scathing report this week urging Commonwealth leaders to stay away from the Sri Lankan meeting.
Conservative senator Hugh Segal, who travelled to the region in March, said he had found nothing during his fact-finding trip that would make Harper change his mind.
“What I saw when I was in Sri Lanka underlined the extent to which core commonwealth values like independence of the judiciary, like democracy and human rights, like religious tolerance remain under serious attack in that country,” he said.
The abuses are rampant: Tamils are being displaced from their homes, a Tamil newspaper’s office was raided and set on fire, a mosque was burnt while local police watch over, the head of the judiciary was impeached in January.
“It’s kind of a soft ethnic cleansing,” Segal told HuffPost.
What the Prime Minister’s decision means is that Canada doesn’t have “double standards,” he said. Canada was a founding member of the Commonwealth and a country that stood steadfast, under different prime ministers, against apartheid, Segal said. “If there are values that needed to be defended in the South of Africa, there are values that need to be defended in the middle of the Indian Ocean in Sri Lanka."
Australia, however, which is grappling with boatloads of Sri Lankan refugees leaving for its coast and is working with the Colombo government, said it believes a “boycott would be counterproductive.”
“The concerns we've got about human rights in Sri Lanka are best met through engagement with that country and through the Commonwealth, using the extra leverage we will enjoy in the count down to that CHOGM meeting,” Foreign Affairs Minister Bob Carr said on ABC last week. A boycott, he said, would “simply isolate the country and render it defiant of international opinion.”
Harper’s decision to boycott the meeting plays favourably with Canada’s large Tamil diaspora — a community of about 300,000 people overwhelmingly located in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) where the Tories hope to pick up more seats during the next federal election in 2015.
David Carment, a professor of international affairs and a fellow at the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, said Harper’s decision to boycott the event is an effort to get the Tamil community — which has historically voted Liberal — on side.
“I don’t think it has much to do with a principled foreign policy that the government claims to be advancing here,” Carment said. “This is pretty much pandering to a domestic audience.”
The Harper government “basically ignored” Tamil protesters when they took to the streets in 2009 to plead with Ottawa to address open, gross and systematic abuses of human rights, Carment said. But now, the Tories have changed course.
“The only way this government can grow is by catering to new Canadians... New Canadians are the battleground for votes and this plays into that,” he told HuffPost.
In addition, Carment said Canada holds little sway in Sri Lanka. The foreign aid budget is barely over $20 million and the country has turned to China for most of its resource needs.
The Canadian Tamil Congress has been calling on Commonwealth leaders to change the venue location for November’s CHOGM.
Spokesman David Poopalapillai said all political parties, Conservative, Liberal and NDP were on side with the Congress’ position.
“The country (Sri Lanka) is being ruled with a military mentality. How do you give the government a stamp of approval from the international community? Everything you do is right so we will come and we will shake hands with you?” he asked.
Sri Lanka has been criticized enough, he added.
“That is what the Government of Canada says. They have taken a very clear position on this,” Poopalapillai said. “They didn’t come to this position overnight. They waited and waited and waited and waited. They gave enough chances!"
Since Ottawa’s reversal, Poopalapillai said Baird has become the “darling” of the Tamil community.
Baird’s spokesman Rick Roth said government had spoken out loudly and clearly on the issue of human rights in Sri Lanka, including the lack of accountability on allegations of war crimes and a lack of reconciliation with the Tamil community.
“As the Prime Minister has stated very clearly, we expect our concerns to be addressed prior to the next Commonwealth meeting. However, given the current circumstances, it would be very difficult for this government to fully participate,” Roth said.
A source said Ottawa had tried to make its case with other countries but had been met with deaf ears.
In a statement Thursday, Sri Lanka High Commissioner Chitranganee Wagiswara blamed “separatist elements within the diaspora” in Canada for relentlessly disseminating anti-Sri Lanka propaganda and lobbying political leaders. Wagiswara said it was outrageous for some Commonwealth members to try to change the venue of the CHOGM after it had been decided by world leaders in 2009 and reaffirmed at their last meeting in 2011.
"The need of the hour from the Commonwealth is to assist and support Sri Lanka, as a Member State having experienced separatist terrorism for nearly three decades, and is expectedly now facing long term post conflict challenges to ensure sustainable peace,” she said in a statement.
“Hostile criticism and unfair targeting of Sri Lanka by Canada only serves to further strengthen the evil forces working against Sri Lanka and does not contribute in any manner to the ongoing rebuilding and reconciliation process in the multi cultural society of the country,” she added.
Sumith Dassanyake, a councillor with the Sri Lankan High Commission in Ottawa, said Sri Lanka expects all the countries to attend the November meeting. “We are making the arrangements,” he said. “We wanted to host it because...we wanted to invite these world leaders and have this conference in Sri Lanka..for the first time.”
Segal said he believes Commonwealth countries face an important decision about the type of organization they want to build.
“I think the Commonwealth values that are being violated are serious and I think the The failure of the Commonwealth so far to act, in a meaningful way, is a violation of the new Commonwealth Charter, which her Majesty signed in London not three weeks ago,” he said.
“It is certainly a violation of the core Commonwealth values that have been the reason for this organization has been together for over sixty years.”
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